Guest guest Posted September 4, 2006 Report Share Posted September 4, 2006 If anyone could comment on this we would be very grateful, thanks! I have a good friend who I sent this post to also and she asked me to ask the group if anyone knew anything in relation to her following comments so I am! Thanks you all! Interesting. Of course the ayurvedic body types also allow for coffee ... kaffa, especially. When pita or vata are out of balance, coffee is not usually prescribed. But kaffa types need coffee. I am curious to see how this relates. Perhaps you have someone very well versed in ayurveda who might comment. The one worry is that the coffee association paid for the research. Coffee Graduates to Health Food Status Your favorite morning brew has a surprising new perk. Good news for the 80 percent of Americans who down an average of 3.2 cups of java a day: Your liver loves it. And because the liver is your body's vital detox center, that's a big health plus. It's not the caffeine. Apparently, it's the antioxidants or other compounds in coffee that keep your liver humming. So if you were just thinking you could do with a cup of joe, go for it. The liver is a major multitasker. It's a housekeeper: It filters toxins from the blood, cleaning pollutants, alcohol, useless residues, nicotine, and other garbage out of the body. It's also a stock clerk: It keeps extra carbohydrates on hand and releases them when blood sugar levels are low, plus it warehouses fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K for future use. It's a body builder, too: The liver makes proteins to build muscles, and it produces bile, which is needed to digest fat. Evidence that coffee takes some stress off the liver was discovered when scientists determined that coffee lovers have fewer liver enzymes in their blood than do coffee shunners -- and that's a good thing. Liver enzymes are an indication of liver damage. What's more, coffee's protective effect was even more pronounced in moderate to heavy drinkers, even though alcohol can be particularly taxing on the liver (however, there's no way coffee can make up for the damage that long-term heavy alcohol consumption does to the liver). Ready for a refill? Originally published on 08/24/2006. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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