Will Giving Coffee to Babies Keep Them Awake as Adults?
London, United Kingdom, October 10, 2009 --(PR.com)-- An F1000 evaluation looks at a Canadian study on how giving caffeine to newborn rats has a long-lasting and detrimental effect on sleep and breathing in adulthood
Breathing problems are the leading causes of hospitalisation and death in premature babies. These babies are therefore often given caffeine because of its qualities as a respiratory stimulant. Until recently, the long-term effects of this treatment in humans have not been examined.
However, Gaspard Montandon and colleagues showed in the Journal of Physiology that the use of caffeine in neonates can cause serious alterations in the sleeping patterns of adult rats as a result of its effect on the developing respiratory system. Sleep abnormality is a significant indicator for ill health and reduced life span.
When the caffeine-treated rats reached adulthood, their sleeping time was reduced, the length of time they took to reach the first stage of sleep was increased, and their non-REM sleep was fragmented. Breathing at rest was higher than in rats not treated with caffeine.
In his review of the study, F1000 Faculty Member James Duffin of the University of Toronto says the results “raise concerns about the long-term consequences of neonatal caffeine administration on brain development and behaviour.”
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Steve Pogonowski
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Notes to Editors
1 James Duffin, Faculty Member for F1000 Biology, Physiology Faculty, is a PhD in the neuroscience programme at the University of Toronto http://f1000biology.com/about/biography/7316544782770066
2 The full text of the evaluation of is available free for 90 days at
http://www.f1000biology.com/article/c23s3yk5hpbwcmy/id/1165003
3 An abstract of the original paper by Montandon et al. (Caffeine in the neonatal period induces long-lasting changes in sleep and breathing in adult rats) is at
http://jp.physoc.org/content/early/2009/09/18/jphysiol.2009.171918
4 Please name Faculty of 1000 Biology in any story you write. If you are writing for the web, please link to the website.
5 Faculty of 1000 Biology http://www.f1000biology.com is a unique online service that helps you stay informed of high impact articles and access the opinions of global leaders in biology. Our distinguished international faculty select and evaluate key articles across biology, providing a rapidly updated, authoritative guide to the life science literature that matters
6 Please contact Steve Pogonowski, PR Manager, for a complimentary journalist subscription to Faculty of 1000 http://f1000.com
Breathing problems are the leading causes of hospitalisation and death in premature babies. These babies are therefore often given caffeine because of its qualities as a respiratory stimulant. Until recently, the long-term effects of this treatment in humans have not been examined.
However, Gaspard Montandon and colleagues showed in the Journal of Physiology that the use of caffeine in neonates can cause serious alterations in the sleeping patterns of adult rats as a result of its effect on the developing respiratory system. Sleep abnormality is a significant indicator for ill health and reduced life span.
When the caffeine-treated rats reached adulthood, their sleeping time was reduced, the length of time they took to reach the first stage of sleep was increased, and their non-REM sleep was fragmented. Breathing at rest was higher than in rats not treated with caffeine.
In his review of the study, F1000 Faculty Member James Duffin of the University of Toronto says the results “raise concerns about the long-term consequences of neonatal caffeine administration on brain development and behaviour.”
###
Media Contact
Steve Pogonowski
PR Manager
Faculty of 1000
+44 (0) 20 7631 9134
steve.pogonowski@f1000.com
http://blog.f1000.com
http://twitter.com/f1000
http://youtube.com/Facultyof1000
Notes to Editors
1 James Duffin, Faculty Member for F1000 Biology, Physiology Faculty, is a PhD in the neuroscience programme at the University of Toronto http://f1000biology.com/about/biography/7316544782770066
2 The full text of the evaluation of is available free for 90 days at
http://www.f1000biology.com/article/c23s3yk5hpbwcmy/id/1165003
3 An abstract of the original paper by Montandon et al. (Caffeine in the neonatal period induces long-lasting changes in sleep and breathing in adult rats) is at
http://jp.physoc.org/content/early/2009/09/18/jphysiol.2009.171918
4 Please name Faculty of 1000 Biology in any story you write. If you are writing for the web, please link to the website.
5 Faculty of 1000 Biology http://www.f1000biology.com is a unique online service that helps you stay informed of high impact articles and access the opinions of global leaders in biology. Our distinguished international faculty select and evaluate key articles across biology, providing a rapidly updated, authoritative guide to the life science literature that matters
6 Please contact Steve Pogonowski, PR Manager, for a complimentary journalist subscription to Faculty of 1000 http://f1000.com
Contact
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Contact
Steve Pogonowski
+44 (0) 207 323 0323
http://f1000.com
Blog http://blog.f1000.com
Twitter http://twitter.com/f1000
LinkedIn http://www.linkedin.com/groups?gid=1971657
Facebook http://www.facebook.com/F1000
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