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Monday, January 17, 2011

Latest news about coffee and health

You win some and you lose "a common phrase, that the bean recently regarding the health of women. In two reports published this month involving the effects of coffee on the health of women. A report was not too fond the coffee and, secondly, the coffee is as much, or rather, a latte.

The coffee cup was half empty when researchers published an article in the Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, who spoke of the correlationbetween coffee and risk of miscarriage. Coffee consumption, according to the report, during pregnancy may increase the likelihood that a woman has an abortion. This is worse news for the news that was bad enough: regardless of coffee consumption habits, 20 percent of pregnancies end in miscarriage.

But unfortunately for fans of Java, the coffee could increase this effect.

Recent research states that women who drink coffee during pregnancy almost doubled their chances of not taking their child to term. L 'research is not, however, the soda pure ground coffee, tea, hot chocolate, sports drinks, or anything with caffeine can be added to an increased risk. These results are reported to doctors divided between telling their pregnant patients not to take caffeine or just saying do not drink to excess. No matter what is decided, caffeine, if not delete it from your diet all together, should be minimized.

Luckily for the coffee, not all negative news recently reportedbean.

Another report published this month by U.S. researchers said caffeine appears to reduce women's risk of developing ovarian cancer. This is particularly true, apparently, women who have gone through menopause and those who have never used oral contraceptives. It was concluded that caffeine consumption is the lowest risk. However, this does not mean that women should drink four cups of coffee a day: the overuse of caffeine can lead to an arrayingot of other problems.

Ovarian cancer is more common in women over 50. Remains a particularly volatile form of cancer, because - unlike cervical cancer - there is no test to detect precancerous cells and prevent them from forming. Ovarian cancer also does not have a lot of symptoms at an early stage, so their particular diagnosis elusive. When detected in its final stages, the prospects are particularly severe.

Screening for ovarian cancer and caffeineconnection is based on a study of 121,000 women between 30 and 35. While regular coffee have proved useful coffee, decaffeinated coffee did not.

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