Caffeine May Offset Health Risks Of Diets High In Fat, Sugar

New York: Caffeine may offset some of the negative effects of an obesogenic diet by reducing the storage of lipids in fat cells and limiting weight gain and the production of triglycerides, researchers have found. Published in the Journal of Functional Foods, the research team from the University of Illinois in US picked mice for […]

Caffinee

New York: Caffeine may offset some of the negative effects of an obesogenic diet by reducing the storage of lipids in fat cells and limiting weight gain and the production of triglycerides, researchers have found.

Published in the Journal of Functional Foods, the research team from the University of Illinois in US picked mice for the study and found that rats that consumed the caffeine extracted from mate tea gained 16 per cent less weight and accumulated 22 per cent less body fat than rats that consumed decaffeinated mate tea.