Epidemiological studies have found associations between high caffeine intake and decreased bone mineral density (BMD). https://t.co/Z4xzCOw0cB.
13:39, great lunch Jewel, @BoozAllen. Now back on @BallCorpHQ & @Danisco/@IFF #Health Science? Can you run the Brown Bag Informatics in Bethesda on building up Bone Mineral Density w/ the New Huntington Beach Desalination Plant? https://t.co/QqhH144uP
Drinking coffee may benefit 30–39 women’s lumbar BMD, but it may adversely affect men aged 40–49 in cross-sectional study based on 2011–2018 NHANES data. Gaoxiang Wang et al. Front Endocrinol 17 Oct 2022 https://t.co/TSyRAZ6hYo
New Research: Association between caffeine intake and lumbar spine bone mineral density in adults aged 20–49: A cross-sectional study: Background Many epidemiological studies have investigated the connection between coffee intake… https://t.co/REZ8mqoVFf