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Journal ArticleDOI

The effects of obesity and exercise on the pharmacokinetics of caffeine in lean and obese volunteers

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TLDR
It is demonstrated that both obesity and exercise have modified the pharmacokinetics of caffeine in 6 caffeine naive, untrained, nonsmoking, college males.
Abstract
The effects of obesity, exercise, and the interaction of obesity and exercise were examined in 6 caffeine naive, untrained, nonsmoking, college males (3 lean (LV), 3 obese (OV)). Each subject received caffeine (oral, 5.83 mg·kg−1 lean body weight) or placebo (50 mg citrate) prior to 3 h of seated rest and prior to 90 min of treadmill walking (40% of their maximal aerobic power) followed by 90 min of seated recovery. Serum samples were collected at various times and analyzed for caffeine by HPLC. Pharmacokinetic analysis indicated that at rest, OV had a significantly higher absorption rate constant (Ka 0.0757 vs. 0.0397 min−1), lower elimination rate constant (Ke 0.0027 vs. 0.0045 min−1), and longer serum half-life (t1/2 4.37 vs. 2.59 h) in comparison to LV. In exercise, as well as at rest LV and OV had a large difference in the volume of distribution (43.2 vs. 101. 1) (rest, 54.1 vs. 103.1). Exercise consistently resulted in a decrease in the maximal serum concentration of caffeine and the area under the curve in OV while having no consistent effect on LV. The interactive effects of obesity and exercise could not be dissociated. However, these results demonstrate that both obesity and exercise have modified the pharmacokinetics of caffeine.

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Impact of Obesity on Drug Metabolism and Elimination in Adults and Children

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TL;DR: A better picture is reached on how a multiplicity of biologic mechanisms seems to drive the levels of caffeine consumption, although much more knowledge is still required to understand caffeine consumption and effects on body functions.
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Coffee, green tea, black tea and oolong tea consumption and risk of mortality from cardiovascular disease in Japanese men and women

TL;DR: Consumption of coffee, green tea and oolong tea and total caffeine intake was associated with a reduced risk of mortality from CVD, with a 38% lower risk among men and 22% among women.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Total body water volumes for adult males and females estimated from simple anthropometric measurements

TL;DR: Individual total body water volumes for 458 adult males and 265 adult females obtained from dilution studies, together with their height, weight, and age have been selected from the literature and the equations that gave the best fit were for males: formula and for females: formula.
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Tolerance to the humoral and hemodynamic effects of caffeine in man.

TL;DR: Near complete tolerance, in terms of both humoral and hemodynamic variables, developed over the first 1-4 d of caffeine, and no long-term effects of caffeine on blood pressure, heart rate, plasma renin activity, plasma catecholamines, or urinary catechols could be demonstrated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Caffeine disposition after oral doses

TL;DR: The results indicate that TMX exhibits dose‐independent kinetics at the levels at which man normally takes TMX, and this profile of TMX disposition in the healthy adult is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of smoking on caffeine clearance

TL;DR: The increased clearance of caffeine by smokers may contribute to the higher consumption of coffee reported to occur in this group and probably reflect the induction of hepatic aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase activity in smokers.
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However, these results demonstrate that both obesity and exercise have modified the pharmacokinetics of caffeine.