Thursday, April 21, 2016
Caffeine Works Study Leaves No Doubt About It! Approx 400mg of Caffeine Get You Going Even After 32h Without Sleep So Why Doesnt It Work for You Anymore
The answer to post-positioned question in the headline of todays SuppVersity article is not easy to find. Therefore I will start with the facts. Facts, researchers from the University of Sfax present in their latest paper in the peer-reviewed scientific journal Psychology & Behavior; facts that leave little doubt that 5 mg/kg of caffeine could counteract the negative effect of 36 h of total-sleep deprivation on physical and cognitive performances, if your body would still react to stimulus - in other words: If your body still reacted like the bodies of the 13 healthy male habitual caffeine-not-abusing physical education students (age: 21.1 ± 1.1 years; body mass: 77.1 ± 7.2 kg; height: 1.77 ± 0.06 m) who volunteered to participate in the present study, it would get you going - seriously!The students had exactly the same time schedule at the university from sunrise to sunset under the control of the experimental team. Participants had taken part in various recreational low-intensity physical activities such us walking, jogging, or aerobics in our university.
No time to sleep, do your "cardio" HIIT style instead of steady state for hours
Never Train To Burn Calories!
Tabata = 14.2kcal /min ? Fat Loss
30s Intervals + 2:1 Work/Rec.
Making HIIT a Hit Part I/II
Making HIIT a Hit Part II/II
Triple Your Energy Exp.
Figure 1: Caffeine affects both body temperature and physical performance during sleep deprivation (Souissi. 2014) |
"Participants were selected according to their usual consumption of caffeine and on the basis of their answers to the Horne and Ösberg Self-Assessment Questionnaire (Horne. 1979) (i.e., to have a group without extreme type (i.e., participants were selected as neither type)). This second criterion resulted in a sample of participants who shared the same timing in terms of rising times (06:30 ± 00:30 h) and bedtimes (23:00 ± 00:30 h). Participants reported no sleep disorder, are non-smokers, and do not consume caffeine or any alcoholic beverages."After four consecutive nights of sleep in the laboratory (sleep adaptation: between 22:30 and 07:00 h), in a randomized order, participants performed four test sessions: after placebo or 5 mg/kg of caffeine ingestion during a baseline night (RN) or a night of 36 h of total sleep deprivation (TSD).
Does this look remotely familiar? If it does, you are already "tolerant". |
"The study documented tolerance development to the subjective effects of caffeine: after chronic dosing, administration of caffeine produced significant subjective effects in the chronic placebo group but not in the chronic caffeine group." The study also provided indirect evidence for tolerance development: during chronic dosing, the chronic caffeine and placebo groups did not differ meaningfully on ratings of mood and subjective effect. Thats important, because it means that not all benefits are lost; plus, it explains why you still dont quit drinking your coffee ;-)
Figure 2: Caffeine boosts cognitive performance during sleep deprivation (Souissi. 2014) |
- the reaction time,
- the squat jump (SJ), and
- the Wingate tests at 18:00 h with 15 min of recovery in-between
Figure 3: Results of the profile of mood test w/ & w/out caffeine before and after TSD (Souissi. 2014) |
So what? To withdraw, or not? In my humble opinion, caffeine junkies like us just have to live with the fact that the psychological and physiolo- gical effects even high doses of caffeine have are negligible. Caffeine or rather coffee is healthy, but its only healthy if you consume it regularly; and the lack of effects on the central nervous system in the "habitual consumer" will actually protect your nervous and cardiovascular system. So, just stick to whatever you can still get out of caffeine, but do never increase your intake beyond 800mg per day on a chronic basis - if even that does no longer effect you, youve been overtraining + abusing for years.
Bottom line: We all know that caffeine works. At least for those 95% of us who dont belong to the caffeine hypermetabolizer, there is this memory somewhere deep inside our heads. A memory of our first "high dose caffeine, tear down the gym"-experience. Its a memory thats burried deep below memories of years of daily caffeine abuse and the knowledge that the only way to get anywhere close to the caffeine naive state we were in back in the day is withdrawal...
Yeah, I know thats hard to imagine and actually, there is no evidence that would suggest that withdrawal and resensitization would be necessary to get the dozens of health benefits I have written about in the past. In fact, you could rather argue that 400mg+ doses of caffeine are going to have a negative effect on your health, as long as they still cause an increase in Central Nervous System (CNS) activity as it was observed in the study at hand. I mean, what would you expect the health consequences of having one of these "high dose caffeine, tear down the gym"-experiences every (other) day? This can hardly be good for your heart and brain, can it?
Yeah, I know thats hard to imagine and actually, there is no evidence that would suggest that withdrawal and resensitization would be necessary to get the dozens of health benefits I have written about in the past. In fact, you could rather argue that 400mg+ doses of caffeine are going to have a negative effect on your health, as long as they still cause an increase in Central Nervous System (CNS) activity as it was observed in the study at hand. I mean, what would you expect the health consequences of having one of these "high dose caffeine, tear down the gym"-experiences every (other) day? This can hardly be good for your heart and brain, can it?
- Evans, Suzette M., and Roland R. Griffiths. "Caffeine tolerance and choice in humans." Psychopharmacology 108.1-2 (1992): 51-59.
- Horne, John A., and Olov Ostberg. "A self-assessment questionnaire to determine morningness-eveningness in human circadian rhythms." International journal of chronobiology 4.2 (1976): 97.
- Souissi, Makram et al."The effects of caffeine ingestion on the reaction time and short-term maximal performance after 36h of sleep deprivation." Physiology & Behavior 131 (2014): 1-6.