Scientists at the Johns
Hopkins Hospitals
University are requiring
warning labels for popular energy drinks, which should inform consumers about
their increased caffeine content and also the possible health risks coming with
every sip of such drink including nervousness, anxiety, insomnia, rapid
heartbeat and tremors.
According to a study led by Dr. Roland Griffiths, some of
these drinks are said to have up to 14 times the caffeine of a regular can of soda,
which is the equivalent to seven cups of extra-strong coffee. The average
12-ounce cola has 35 milligrams of caffeine. A 6-ounce coffee contains 80 to
150 milligrams, while energy drinks can have between 50 and 500 milligrams.
The bad news is that more teenagers are consuming energy
drinks posing their lives at high risk, as “at the higher level, caffeine is a
drug. It’s a stimulant. It’s an alerting agent, but it can also induce sweating
and hypertension and rapid heart rate,” Dr. Steven Lamm, an internist at New York University said.
Caffeine intoxication is currently defined by a number of
symptoms and clinical features that surface in response to recent excessive
consumption of caffeine. Common features of caffeine intoxication include
excitement, anxiety, rapid heartbeat, restlessness, tremors, insomnia, rambling
flow of thought and speech or periods of inexhaustibility. In rare cases,
caffeine intoxication can lead to death.
Worse than this is that energy drinks are marketed as
supplementary (and not soft) drinks, therefore they are neither required to
comply with the US Food and Drug Administration’s maximum caffeine content for
soda and other beverages (71 milligrams per 12-ounce can), nor compelled to
label it.
And as if this wasn’t enough, some consumers use to have
energy drinks combined with strong alcoholic beverages, such as whisky and
vodka, a combination known to have a noxious effects on the heart as well as on
the brains. The Johns Hopkins researchers also said that caffeinated drinks can
cause abuse of prescription stimulant drugs like Ritalin.
Therefore, the team of researchers from Johns Hopkins
University who carried
out the study said that manufacturers should note on caffeinated energy drinks’
labels the caffeine doses the products carry, and to caution on presumptive
risks they pose to consumers.
Whether the study will have an impact on US health authorities remains to be
seen. However, let’s not forget that we should not wait for the authorities to
do something beneficial for our health. We should take our own precautions in
order to avoid such risks as those coming with energy drinks.
More information on the study of the Johns Hopkins
University can be found
in the Sept. 20 issue of the journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence.