David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, USA.
Adv Nutr. 2013 Jan 1;4(1):115-22. doi: 10.3945/an.112.002717.
A systematic literature review of human studies relating caffeine or caffeine-rich beverages to cognitive decline reveals only 6 studies that have collected and analyzed cognition data in a prospective fashion that enables study of decline across the spectrum of cognition. These 6 studies, in general, evaluate cognitive function using the Mini Mental State Exam and base their beverage data on FFQs. Studies included in our review differed in their source populations, duration of study, and most dramatically in how their analyses were done, disallowing direct quantitative comparisons of their effect estimates. Only one of the studies reported on all 3 exposures, coffee, tea, and caffeine, making comparisons of findings across studies more difficult. However, in general, it can be stated that for all studies of tea and most studies of coffee and caffeine, the estimates of cognitive decline were lower among consumers, although there is a lack of a distinct dose response. Only a few measures showed a quantitative significance and, interestingly, studies indicate a stronger effect among women than men.
一项关于咖啡因或富含咖啡因的饮料与认知能力下降相关的人体研究的系统文献综述显示,只有 6 项研究以前瞻性的方式收集和分析认知数据,从而能够研究认知能力下降的全过程。这 6 项研究通常使用简易精神状态检查来评估认知功能,并根据食物频数问卷来评估饮料数据。我们的综述中纳入的研究在其来源人群、研究持续时间以及分析方法方面存在很大差异,从而不允许对其效应估计值进行直接的定量比较。只有一项研究报告了所有 3 种暴露因素(咖啡、茶和咖啡因)的情况,这使得跨研究进行结果比较更加困难。然而,总的来说,可以说对于所有关于茶的研究以及大多数关于咖啡和咖啡因的研究,在消费者中认知能力下降的估计值较低,尽管缺乏明确的剂量反应关系。只有少数措施显示出了定量意义,有趣的是,研究表明女性的效果强于男性。