Secret To Make Belly Fat Disappear Fast – Drink More Coffee

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Drinking coffee has an effect on weight loss, but not all kinds of coffee have the same impact, and coffee affects different dieters in different ways.

The caffeine in coffee is a benefit to dieters who drink coffee regularly. A clinical trial at the University Hospital in Zurich, Switzerland, found that habitual drinkers of caffeinated coffee tend to have a milder response to stress.

Among people who have to have their morning coffee to wake up, emotional stress results in less release of the stress hormone cortisol. Since cortisol is associated with deposits of belly fat, drinking coffee on a daily basis results in less belly fat and lower weight.

Among people who drink decaf or who usually don’t drink coffee at all, drinking coffee had the exact opposite effect. A sudden jolt of caffeine, if you are not used to it, raises blood pressure and increases the production of cortisol.

In the Swiss clinical trial, blood pressure in drinkers of regular coffee increased to an average of 130/74 in response to an experimental emotional stress. But average blood pressure in non-coffee drinkers and decaf drinkers rose to 151/83 under the same conditions.

The sudden rise in blood pressure was due to cortisol, and this is the same cortisol that encourages deposits of belly fat.

If you are not used to caffeine every day, caffeine causes weight gain. But if you can’t get started without your morning cup of coffee, caffeine in coffee assists weight loss. This effect is even more pronounced for high-caffeine coffee drinks like espresso.

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Never Mix, Never Worry – Coffee Won’t Sober You Up

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Maybe this only applies to rodents…
A study by Temple University, Philadelphia, reports that coffee can cloud your judgement when you’ve drunk alcohol

Slate quotes a BBC news report that coffee simply makes it harder for people to realize they’ve had one too many, and does nothing for their sobriety. That means the ‘co-use of caffeine and alcohol could actually lead to poor decisions with disastrous outcomes,’ says the lead researcher in the study. The study involved giving mice alcohol and caffeine to see how well they could navigate a maze and avoid unpleasant sensations. The result? The mice were relatively alert and relaxed but ’still incompetent at sidestepping nasty shocks.’

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