Cerebral blood flow and behavioural effects of caffeine in habitual and non-habitual consumers of caffeine: A near infrared spectroscopy study

David Kennedy, Crystal Haskell

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

57 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Caffeine has been shown to modulate cerebral blood flow, with little evidence of tolerance to these effects following habitual use. However, previous studies have focused on caffeine levels much higher than those found in dietary servings and have compared high caffeine consumers with low consumers rather than 'non-consumers'. The current placebo-controlled double-blind, balanced-crossover study employed near infrared spectroscopy to monitor pre-frontal cerebral-haemodynamics at rest and during completion of tasks that activate the pre-frontal cortex. Twenty healthy young habitual and non-habitual consumers of caffeine received 75mg caffeine or placebo. Caffeine significantly decreased cerebral blood flow but this was subject to a significant interaction with consumption status, with no significant effect being shown in habitual consumers and an exaggerated effect in non-habitual consumers. These findings suggest that caffeine, at levels typically found in a single dietary serving, is able to modulate cerebral blood flow but these effects are subject to tolerance.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)298-306
JournalBiological Psychology
Volume86
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2011

Keywords

  • Caffeine
  • cognitive
  • cerebral blood-flow
  • near infrared spectroscopy
  • NIRS
  • haemodynamics
  • consumers
  • habituation

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