Add chocolate to your morning coffee for best results, new study says
Clarkson University researcher Ali Boolani recently completed a study that explores the powers of coffee and cocoa. The assistant professor of physical therapy & physician assistant studies teamed up with colleagues at the University of Georgia to examine the “acute effects of brewed cocoa consumption on attention, motivation to perform cognitive work and feelings of anxiety, energy and fatigue.”
Adding a dash of cocoa to your coffee may help you concentrate better, a study from the University of Georgia suggests.
The study from Clarkson University compared the “mental energy” effects of four different warm beverages, one with cocoa, one with caffeine, one with a combination of the two and the final as a placebo.
The study was a double-blind one: and as such the drinks were modified to taste the same. To do that, study author Ali Boolani, a professor at Clarkson, said the no-calorie sweetener Truvia was added to the drinks. Participants were also were given nose clips to ensure there was no differentiating between them.
On each day of the study, the participants were asked to drink one of the four drinks, then were asked to complete a “mental energy test.”
The results showed quicker response rates from those who drank cocoa, and those with the caffeine-cocoa concoction also had higher accuracy than those with the cocoa drink.
Along with the concentration boost, the research showed that cocoa lessened “caffeine’s anxiety-producing effects.” But take the results with a grain of salt, or rather, sugar. The study was funded by Hersheys, and the company provided the drinks.
“Cocoa increases cerebral blood flow, which increases cognition and attention. Caffeine alone can increase anxiety,” Boolani explained. “This particular project found that cocoa lessens caffeine’s anxiety-producing effects — a good reason to drink mocha lattes,”
The study found another interesting statistic in that the caffeine had a negative effect on people’s moods: when compared to the placebo group, those who had only caffeine in their drink were angrier. Consuming cocoa along with the caffeine weakened those feelings of anger along with anxiety.
Ali said there’s still lots more testing to be done, and will be looking into breaking down the chemicals in the drinks and why the effects were produced.
You can read more about the study results published January in BMC Nutrition.
Source: globalnews.ca/news/3288136/add-chocolate-to-your-morning-coffee-for-best-results-new-study-says/
Sarah Williams
February 13, 2025Proin iaculis purus consequat sem cure digni ssim donec porttitora entum suscipit rhoncus. Accusantium quam, ultricies eget id, aliquam eget nibh et. Maecen aliquam, risus at semper.
James Cooper
February 13, 2025Quisque ut nisi. Donec mi odio, faucibus at, scelerisque quis, convallis in, nisi. Suspendisse non nisl sit amet velit hendrerit rutrum. Ut leo. Ut a nisl id ante tempus hendrerit.
Rachel Adams
February 13, 2025Vivamus elementum semper nisi. Aenean vulputate eleifend tellus. Aenean leo ligula, porttitor eu, consequat vitae, eleifend ac, enim.