Title: Caffeine Tamie Miura Psychology 760 San Diego State
1Caffeine
- Tamie Miura
- Psychology 760
- San Diego State University
2- Introduction
- Mechanism of action
- Properties of adenosine
- Pharmacodynamics of caffeine
- Pharmacokinetics of caffeine
- Effect of caffeine on neurotransmitters
- Studies on the behavioral effects of caffeine
- Tolerance
- Withdrawal and physical dependence
- Health concerns and therapeutic uses
3Caffeine
- Caffeine is often considered the most widely
consumed stimulant in the world. - Roughly about 80 of adults in the United States
drink coffee or tea daily. - Intake of caffeine also occurs from ingesting
chocolate, cold and headache medicines and
appetite suppressants. - Every year in the U.S. consumers spend around 30
million dollars on caffeine tablets and 50
billion dollars on caffeinated soda - Benowitz, 1990
4Amount of Caffeine Consumption
- Beverages / Food
- Cup of coffee 65-120 mg caffeine
- Espresso 1oz shot 40 mg
- Cup of tea 40-60 mg
- Can of soda 30-60 mg
- Red Bull (8.3oz) 80 mg
- Hersheys milk chocolate almond bar (6oz) 25mg
- Over the counter medicines
- No-Doze 100 200 mg
- Midol 20-100 mg
- Excedrin 30-65 mg
- Benowitz, 1990
- Total consumption of caffeine per person per day
is estimated at - 210 to 238Â mg (Barone and Roberts, 1996)
5Chemical Properties
- Caffeine, an alkaloid of the methylxanthine
family. - Similar compounds included in the methylxanthine
family are theophylline and theobromine
6Mechanism of Action
- Three main hypotheses
- 1. Mobilization of intracellular calcium
- Biphasic effect on intracellular calcium levels
- Toxic amounts of caffeine
- 2. Inhibition of phosphodiesterase
- Inhibition of enzyme that breaks down cyclic
adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) - Toxic amounts of caffeine
- 3. Antagonism of inhibitory presynaptic adenosine
receptors - Caffeine blocks adenosine receptors
- Resulting in the inhibition of the breakdown of
cAMP - Blocking the inhibitory effects of adenosine
- Nehlig et al., 1992
7Properties of Adenosine
- Adenosine is an endogenous inhibitory
neurotransmitter or neuromodulator that acts on
adenosine receptors located throughout the body - Reduction in firing rate of neurons
- Inhibition of synaptic transmission
- Inhibition of neuronal release of many
neurotransmitters (i.e. acetylcholine,
norepinephrine, dopamine, serotonin, and
glutamate)
8Subclasses of Adenosine Receptors
- Two Main subclasses
- A1 receptors high affinity for adenosine
- Located throughout the brain (hippocampus,
thalamus, cerebral and cerebellar cortex) - A2 receptors low affinity for adenosine
- Located mainly in the striatum, basal ganglia and
nucleus accumbens - A2a and A2b
9Antagonism of Adenosine Receptors
- Caffeine competitively binds to both A1 and A2a
adenosine receptors thereby inhibiting the
actions of adenosine resulting in an increase
in the release/turnover of many neurotransmitters
like monoamines and acetylcholine. - Nehlig et al., 1992 Nehlig et al., 1999
10Pharmacodynamics
Garrett and Griffiths 1997
11Chronic Consumption of Caffeine During
Development on the Density of Adenosine Receptors
- Study by Guillet and Kellogg 1991
- Doses of caffeine given to rat pups during
development - 20mg/kg (postnatal day 2) and 15mg/kg (postnatal
days 3-6) - Density of adenosine receptors examined across
different ages (14 90 postnatal days) - Significant increase in specific binding after
neonatal exposure to caffeine in the cortex,
cerebellum, and hippocampus due to an increase in
A1 receptors. - Changes in A1 receptors lasted for several weeks
after cessation of caffeine
12Chronic Consumption of Caffeine During
Development on the Density of Benzodiazepine
Receptors
- Research by Boulenger and Marangos 1989
- Mice pups were given a diet enriched with
caffeine for 15 days - No increase in benzodiazepine receptors, after
chronic oral administration of caffeine. - Controlled environment and housing to minimize
stress - Contradictory results on chronic caffeine
consumption and the density of benzodiazepine
receptors - Stress rather than caffeine-enriched diet induces
an upregulation of benzodiazepine receptors - 5 10 times higher concentration of caffeine
required to produce an antagonistic effect on
benzodiazepine receptors than adenosine receptors
13Pharmacokinetics
- Absorption
- Gastrointestinal tract and stomach
- Rapid rate, peak blood level in 30-60 min.
- Crosses lipid-membrane (not water soluble)
- Distribution
- Diffuses throughout the organism and crosses BBB
- Including placenta and placental BBB
- Nehlig et al., 1999 Fredholm et al., 1999
14Pharmacokinetics
- Metabolism
- Metabolized through liver biotransformation
initially by demethylation into
dimethylxanthines. - Dimethylxanthines are pharmacologically active
and may add to the effects of caffeine
consumption in humans. - This process is unique to humans, no other animal
species metabolizes caffeine in a similar way - Half life of caffeine
- Three to eight hours varies with age and other
external factors - Newborns cannot metabolize caffeine, mainly
eliminated by excretion - Half life 80 /_ 23 hours
- Smokers, half life is reduced up to 50
- Pregnant women and those taking oral
contraceptive, half life up to 15 hours longer - Nehlig et al., 1999 Fredholm et al., 1999
15Effects of Caffeine on Neurotransmitters
- Caffeine modifies the release and turnover of
several neurotransmitters by inhibiting
presynaptic adenosine receptors. - serotonin, acetylcholine, glutamate,
norepinephrine, and dopamine - Caffeine may also act at postsynaptic receptors.
- The threshold necessary for caffeine to induce
changes in neurotransmitter function is an
prominent area currently being explored to better
understand the effects of caffeine on
neurotransmission.
16Caffeine and Serotonin
- Increased in vitro serotonin concentrations in
the brain stem, cerebral cortex, and cerebellum - Inconsistent results on the impact on the rate of
release, uptake, synthesis and turnover - Decreased serotonin accessibility postsynaptically
17Caffeine and Acetylcholine
- Increased Ach release from the cerebral cortex
- 15 and 30 mg/kg I.P. in anesthetized rats
- Increased Ach turnover in the hippocampus
- Intracerebral injections of theophylline
- Relatively unexplored area
18Caffeine and Amino Acids
- Increased amount of glutamate in the whole brain
of mice - Decreased amounts of GABA and glycine,
specifically posterior region of the brain - Dose of caffeine
- .5 mg/ml in drinking water for 7 days then
- 1.0 mg/ml for 14 days
19Caffeine and Catecholamines
- Norepinephrine (noradrenaline) increased rate of
synthesis and turnover - Increase firing rate of noradrenergic neurons in
the locus coeruleus - Exact mechanism of how caffeine activates
norepinephrine neurons is not clear - Epinephrine (adrenaline) increased circulating
rate - Dopamine
- Inconsistent findings increased, decreased and
no change in rate of synthesis and turnover - Animal model (rat) caffeine inhibits firing rate
of dopamine neurons in the ventral tegmental area
that projects to the mesolimbic and mesocortical
areas no significant change in the firing rate
of dopamine neurons in the substantia nigra that
projects to the caudate nucleus
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21Caffeine and Dopamine
- Indirect action on dopamine receptors through
caffeines antagonistic effect on adenosine
receptors - A2 adenosine receptors are co-localized
postsynaptically with D2 dopamine receptors on
striatal neuronal cells and extends to the core
and shell of the nucleus accumbens - Revealing direct evidence for a central
functional interaction between the two receptors - Stimulation of A2 receptors with a selective A2
agonist decreases the affinity of D2 receptors
for dopamine - Fredholm et al., 1999
22The Behavioral Effects of Caffeine
- Motor activity
- Vigilance
- Attention
- Learning and memory
- Mood
- Arousal
23Caffeine and Locomotor ActivityStudy by Solinas
et al. 2002
- Animal model
- I.P. injections of caffeine
- 3 mg/kg 10 mg/kg 30 mg/kg 100mg/kg
- Total motor activity after I.P. injection
resulted in a dose response curve that had an
inverted u-shape - Significant motor activity with caffeine doses of
10 and 30mg/kg 3 and 100mg/kg are ineffective
24Effects of Caffeine on Dopamine and Glutamate
Release
- Study by Solinas et al., 2002
- In vivo study where probes were implanted in the
shell or core of the nucleus accumbens in adult
Sprague-Dawley rats - 10 and 30 mg/kg doses of caffeine induced
significant increase in extracellular
concentrations of dopamine and glutamate in the
shell of the nucleus accumbens - 30 mg/kg dose of caffeine significantly increased
level of dopamine in the core of nucleus accumbens
25Caffeine and Motor ActivityGarrett and Holtzman
1996
- Animal Model
- Rotational behavioral experiment
- Animals with unilateral nigrostriatal lesions
- Doses of caffeine 10-100 mg/kg
- 30 mg/kg produced peak contralateral rotational
behavior - Locomotor activity experiment
- Doses of caffeine 3100 mg/kg
- 10 30 mg/kg produced peak increases in
locomotor activity - Both motor behaviors were affected in a biphasic
manner by caffeine - Two different mechanisms by which caffeine
affects rotational and locomotor activity
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27Caffeine and Vigilance
- 16 Human subjects
- 28 hrs of sleep deprivation
- Subjects given a 400mg dose of caffeine and two
subsequent 100mg doses of caffeine - ½ hour after first dose of caffeine a 2 hr march,
followed by sandbag pilling tasks - Second day treadmill run to exhaustion
- Subjects that received caffeine performed the
sandbag pilling task in a significantly shorter
amount of time than the placebo group - Caffeine group had significantly longer time
until they reached exhaustion compared to placebo
(25 longer treadmill run) - McLellan et al., 2004
28Caffeine and Learning and Memory
- Inconclusive results on the relationship of
caffeine and learning and memory abilities - Some studies have shown improvements in learning
and memory - Fewer errors and decreased latency in maze tasks
- Others have shown no change in performance
- Researchers agree that caffeine does influence
attention levels, vigilance, and exploratory
behavior which may impact the learning process
29Caffeine and Mood
- Low doses of caffeine are associated with
affecting ones mood in a positive manner. - Subjective reports of changes in energy,
imagination, efficiency, increased
self-confidence and feeling of well being. - High doses of caffeine (over 200mg) may produce
feelings of insomnia, anxiousness, nervousness
and restlessness
30Caffeine and Sleep
- Human Study
- 200mg of caffeine
- Prolonged onset of sleep (33 min.)
- Decreased quality of sleep (self report)
- Regular coffee drinkers have relatively mild
effects of caffeine on sleep compared to
non-habitual coffee drinkers - Nehlig et al., 1992
31Tolerance to the Effects of Caffeine
- A change in the sensitivity of a subject to an
agent after continuous exposure has occurred, in
which larger doses are needed to produce the
original effect - Tolerance to various behavioral effects of
caffeine have been shown extensively in animal
studies, relatively few human studies - Tolerance occurs quiet rapidly in animals
- Animal Model
- Rats had more than 50mg/kg of caffeine per day
available in their drinking water (7 days total) - After a week, the rats were given a series of
doses of caffeine (3-100mg/kg) and locomotor
activity was assessed - Non exposed rats had a 50 increase in locomotor
activity when given a single 3.0mg/kg dose of
caffeine - Rats previously exposed to caffeine did not have
an increase in locomotor activity more than by
25 and this occurred at the higher caffeine dose
levels - Finn and Holtzman 1986
32Tolerance to the Effects of Caffeine
- Human Studies
- Tolerance to the effect of caffeine on blood
pressure, heart rate and diuresis have been found
to develop within a few days of caffeine
consumption - Tolerance to certain behavioral effects of
caffeine have also been demonstrated - Anxiety, jitteriness, nervousness, insomnia
33Mechanism of the Development of Tolerance
- An increase in the number of adenosine receptors
may contribute to the sedative effects on
activity observed in both animal and human
studies after caffeine consumption has stopped - Increased sensitivity to endogenous adenosine
- Adaptive changes in adenosine receptors doesnt
explain the development of tolerance to stimulant
action of caffeine in cases of locomotor activity - Compensatory changes in the dopaminergic system
resulting from chronic antagonism at adenosine
receptors may play a role in the development of
tolerance to caffeine - Dews et al., 2002 Nehlig et al., 1999
34Caffeine Dependence and Withdrawal
- Withdrawal symptoms usually occur if tolerance
has developed and the presence of withdrawal
symptoms after discontinuation of a substance
generally defines physical dependence - Withdrawal symptoms have been reported within
12-24 hours after termination of caffeine intake - And generally peaks around 20-48 hours after
cessation of caffeine - Benowitz 1990
35Withdrawal Continued
- Caffeine withdrawal Human studies
- Increases cerebral blood flow
- Headaches, irritability, sleepiness, lethargy,
impaired mental function, weakness, hand or limb
tremors, dysphoria, restlessness, nausea and
anxiety - Caffeine withdrawal Animal studies
- Decreased locomotor activity
- Decreased operant behavior
- Changes in sleep
- Dews et al., 2002 Nehlig et al., 1999
36Caffeine Related Disorders
- Caffeinism A condition due to an excessive
intake of caffeine resulting in - diarrhea, elevated blood pressure, rapid
breathing, heart palpitations, and insomnia. - Caffeine-Related Disorders listed in the DSM
- Caffeine intoxication
- Caffeine induced anxiety disorder
- Caffeine induced sleep disorder
37Caffeine and Health Concerns
- Conflicting findings on any association between
caffeine and impaired health. - Moderate consumption of caffeine does not seem to
pose health risks - Dose response relationship between the amount of
coffee consumption and the risk of cardiovascular
disease - Elevated levels of total and LDL cholesterol
(more than 2-3 cups per day) - A correlation reported between caffeine
consumption in pregnant individuals and lower
newborn birth weights - Neonatal do exhibit withdrawal symptoms born to
mother who consume a large amount of caffeine
during pregnancy - High doses of caffeine shown to elicit mental
disturbances like anxiety, restlessness,
nervousness, and insomnia (exacerbates in
individuals who are more sensitive to anxiety and
may produce panic attacks at high doses, but not
in healthy controls) - Benowitz 1990 Nawrot et al., 2003
38Therapeutic Uses for Caffeine
- Treatment of apnea in newborns
- Caffeine helps regularize breathing
- Treatment of migraine headaches when combined
with aspirin