Study: Coffee could shield liver from alcohol 
                                damage
                              By 
                                Carla K. Johnson 
                                The Associated Press
                              Chicago 
                                - Coffee may counteract alcohol's poisonous effects 
                                on the liver and help prevent cirrhosis, researchers 
                                say.
                              In 
                                a study of more than 125,000 people, one cup of 
                                coffee per day cut the risk of alcoholic cirrhosis 
                                by 20 percent. Four cups per day reduced the risk 
                                by 80 percent. The coffee effect held true for 
                                women and men of various ethnic backgrounds.
                              It 
                                is unclear whether it is the caffeine or some 
                                other ingredient in coffee that provides the protection, 
                                said a study co-author, Dr. Arthur Klatsky of 
                                the Kaiser Permanente Division of Research in 
                                Oakland, Calif. 
                              Of 
                                course, there is a better way to avoid alcoholic 
                                cirrhosis of the liver, Klatsky said. 
                                "The way to avoid getting ill is not to drink 
                                a lot of coffee but to cut down on the drinking" 
                                of alcohol, he said. 
                              The 
                                participants ranged from teetotalers, who made 
                                up 12 percent of the studygroup, to heavy drinkers, 
                                who made up 8 percent. The researchers calculated 
                                the risk reductions rate for the whole group, 
                                not just the drinkers.
                              Not 
                                all heavy drinkers develop cirrhosis, an irreversible 
                                scarring of the liver that hurts the organ's ability 
                                to filter toxins from the blood. 
                              Klatsky 
                                said the new findings may help explain why some 
                                people's livers survive heavy alcohol use. 
                              Hepatitis 
                                C and some inherited diseases can also cause cirrhosis. 
                                But the study found coffee did not protect the 
                                liver against those other causes of scarring. 
                                
                              The 
                                same study found coffee drinkers had healthier 
                                results on blood tests used to measure liver function, 
                                whether or not they were heavy alcohol users. 
                                
                              Coffee's 
                                effect on reducing liver enzymes in the blood 
                                was more apparent among the heavy drinkers in 
                                the study. 
                              Cirrhosis 
                                from all causes kills more than 27,000 Americans 
                                a year and sends nearly 400,000 to the hospital. 
                                
                              The 
                                findings, published in Monday's Archives of Internal 
                                Medicine, build on reports that coffee also may 
                                reduce the risk of liver cancer. 
                              The 
                                data came from members of a northern California 
                                health plan. 
                              Their 
                                coffee consumption was noted only at the beginning 
                                of the study, which the researchers admitted was 
                                a limitation. They were followed for an average 
                                of 14 years. 
                              The 
                                researchers found no reduced risk of cirrhosis 
                                for tea drinkers. 
                              Tea 
                                has less caffeine than coffee, and there were 
                                fewer heavy tea drinkers in the study, so if caffeine 
                                is the protective ingredient, an effect may not 
                                have shown up for tea in the study, Klatsky said.