Psychosomatic Medicine
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Published online before print December 7, 2009
Psychosom Med 2009, doi:10.1097/PSY.0b013e3181c92a9c
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© 2009 by American Psychosomatic Society

Original Article


Received ,

Caffeine Consumption and Cognitive Function at Age 70: The Lothian Birth Cohort 1936 Study

Janie Corley , MA, Xueli Jia , PhD, Janet A. M. Kyle , PhD, Alan J. Gow , PhD, Caroline E. Brett , MSc, John M. Starr , MA, FRCPE, Geraldine McNeill , PhD, Ian J. Deary , PhD, FRCPE


Address correspondence and reprint requests to: Ian J. Deary, PhD, FRCPE, E-mail: I.Deary{at}ed.ac.uk.


   Abstract

Objective: To investigate the association between caffeine consumption and cognitive outcomes in later life. Methods: Participants were 923 healthy adults from the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936 Study, on whom there were intelligence quotient (IQ) data from age 11 years. Cognitive function at age 70 years was assessed, using tests measuring general cognitive ability, speed of information processing, and memory. Current caffeine consumption (using multiple measures of tea, coffee, and total dietary caffeine) was obtained by self-report questionnaire, and demographic and health information was collected in a standardized interview. Results: In age- and sex-adjusted models, there were significant positive associations between total caffeine intake and general cognitive ability and memory. After adjustment for age 11 IQ and social class, both individually and together, most of these associations became nonsignificant. A robust positive association, however, was found between drinking ground coffee (e.g., filter and espresso) and performance on the National Adult Reading Test (NART, p = .007), and the Wechsler Test of Adult Reading (WTAR, p = .02). No gender effects were observed, contrary to previous studies. Generally, higher cognitive scores were associated with coffee consumption, and lower cognitive scores with tea consumption, but these effects were not significant in the fully adjusted model. Conclusions: The present study is rare in having childhood IQ in a large sample of older people. The results suggest that the significant caffeine intake-cognitive ability associations are bidirectional—because childhood IQ and estimated prior IQ are associated with the type of caffeine intake in old age—and partly confounded by social class.

Key Words: caffeine, cognitive function, childhood IQ, aging







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Copyright © 2009 by the American Psychosomatic Society