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. 2023 Feb 13;15(4):934.
doi: 10.3390/nu15040934.

Relationship between Coffee, Tea, and Carbonated Beverages and Cardiovascular Risk Factors

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Relationship between Coffee, Tea, and Carbonated Beverages and Cardiovascular Risk Factors

Hye-Ji An et al. Nutrients. .

Abstract

We aimed to analyze the relationship between coffee, tea, and carbonated beverages and cardiovascular risk factors. We used data from the fourth to eighth Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (2007-2016, 2019-2020). We categorized the frequency of intake into three groups (<1 time/week, 1 time/week to <1 time/day, and ≥1 time/day). Subsequently, logistic regression analyses by sex were performed to assess cardiovascular risk factors (hypertension (HTN), diabetes mellitus (DM), dyslipidemia (DL), or metabolic syndrome (MetS)) according to the frequency of coffee, tea, and carbonated beverage intake. For HTN, coffee intake showed an inverse relationship and tea intake showed a direct relationship. For DM, coffee intake showed an inverse relationship, and tea and carbonated beverage intake showed a direct relationship. For DL, coffee intake showed an inverse relationship, whereas tea intake demonstrated a direct relationship. In addition, carbonated beverage intake showed a direct relationship with MetS. Coffee intake showed an inverse relationship with HTN, DM, and DL. However, tea intake showed a direct relationship with HTN, DM, and DL, whereas carbonated beverage intake showed a direct relationship with DM and MetS.

Keywords: carbonated beverage; coffee; diabetes; dyslipidemia; hypertension; tea.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Grants and funding

This study received no external funding.
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