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Man shocks doctors with 254/150 blood pressure, stroke from energy drinks

arstechnica.com

19 points by canucker2016 a day ago · 7 comments

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aurareturn a day ago

   who finally revealed that he had a habit of drinking an average of eight high-potency energy drinks every day.
8 of them. Don't do that.
derbOac a day ago

I've often wondered about the actual effect of caffeine on blood pressure for an individual. This case is pretty extreme, but the literature repeatedly suggests that if you consume caffeine regularly, the effect on blood pressure is pretty minimal — that the significant effects are found if you do not usually consume caffeine and then do so.

This always seemed a little suspicious to me because there are obviously limits to this reasoning, like this case, and the effects probably vary from person to person.

I'm tempted to wean myself off caffeine to see if there's a difference for me, but I'm not sure if it is worth the trouble based on the literature. Anecdotally reading through forums it seems some people have dramatic decreases in blood pressure from doing so, but others actually report increases. I'd be interested to see the distribution of individual effects across people in a rigorous large-N ABA type study, but I can see how that would be difficult to do.

karim79 a day ago

Aren't energy drinks packed with sugar? That surely "helped" a bit[0]. My unqualified opinion is that the cause of his stroke wasn't solely caffeine (and perhaps Taurine) and other crap which constitutes.energy drinks.

[0] https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25547872/

tomcam a day ago

I had slightly higher blood pressure than that last time I was given a colonoscopy lol. (TMI: probably due to childhood abuse.) They stopped immediately and it plummeted equally fast. Now they knock me out and it’s awesome.

canucker2016OP a day ago

  The man, who was in his 50s and otherwise healthy, showed up at a hospital after the entire left side of his body abruptly went numb and he was left with clumsy, uncoordinated muscle movements (ataxia). His blood pressure was astonishingly high, at 254/150 mm Hg. For context, a normal reading is under 120/80, while anything over 180/120 is considered a hypertensive crisis, which is a medical emergency.

  Four weeks into his recovery, he was on five different drugs to try to bring down his blood pressure. At that point, doctors pushed for more lifestyle information from the man, who finally revealed that he had a habit of drinking an average of eight high-potency energy drinks every day.

  Each of the 16-ounce drinks was labeled as containing 160 mg of caffeine, a stimulant that can raise blood pressure. For reference, there’s about 90 mg of caffeine in a normal cup of coffee. So eight of these energy drinks would be 1,280 mg, the equivalent of a little more than 14 cups of coffee a day. But the doctors point out that the labeled amount of caffeine was only the “pure caffeine” amount. Such energy drinks contain additional ingredients, like guarana (a plant native to the Amazon used as a stimulant), that can contain “hidden caffeine.” Guarana is “thought to contain caffeine at twice the concentration of a coffee bean,” Coyle and Munshi write.

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