wildhaus
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Wildhaus|Switzerland
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I have looked deeper into the idea of the use of soft drinks containing caffeine. I have also talked to a pharmacologist to help me, and understand some things about caffeine and headaches. I still do not see a correlation, other than a speculative correlation, as caffeine causes headaches, at more or less the same rate, as it can abort it. Still, there is a tractable and reproducible, indication that caffeine could help as a plausible abortive alternative. BUT: I cannot see how one can abort one’s headaches with soft drinks containing caffeine. The amount is so dismal that unless one is so sensitive to caffeine, that if that individual were to drink a normal cup of milk coffee he will go into a “caffeine flush”. And furthermore, in order to achieve an abort of a CH episode, one would need to use so much of the discussed soft drink that at the end of the day it would very much “compliment” ones figure. But, I don’t know. I am still searching the net. Also a co-worker that is a chemist/pharmacologist (her father has CH) is looking in some more professional books and publications for related information, correlating soft drinks containing caffeine, and aborting headaches, but so far, without much of useful (reliable) information. I have to add, that in a resent post the dictum posted, clamed, the CH episodes have been cured, and if I understand the post right, the soft drink containing caffeine is not used as an abortive, it is rather a preventive or even better, it is a CURE. I cannot find any reference to the quantities involved, in order to achieve the ultimate goal of cure, so I cannot even try and speculate. But I do not think it is possible, not even remotely possible. It must be some sort of a bizarre coincidence that the CH episodes subsided for whatever reason there is. Due to the coincidence, the use of the drink and disappearance of CH has been (innocently) correlated to the use of the soft drink. I have collected some data about the Quantities of Caffeine in various drinks: Product Serving size Caffeine per serving (mg) Caffeine per litre (mg Coffee, Starbucks Tall 12 U.S. fl oz 240 650-700 Coffee, brewed 207 mL (7 U.S. fl oz) 80–135 386–652 Coffee, drip 207 mL (7 U.S. fl oz) 115–175 555 845 Coffee, espresso 44–60 mL (1.5-2 U.S. fl oz) 100 1691–2254 Excedrin tablet 1 tablet 65 N/A Caffeine tablet (extra strength) 1 tablet 200 N/A Red Bull 250 mL (8.2 U.S. fl oz) 80 320 Soft drink, Coca-Cola 355 mL (12 U.S. fl oz) 34 96
I have no idea (or for that matter, can I believe) how it is possible to even logically argue that a soft drink can provide any relief, let alone be a cure for CH, unless one would drink about 21 liters (about 5 gallons) of the soft drink, per day just to be equivalent to a small espresso, or drink about 7 liters (about 2 gallons) of soft drink to be equivalent to a simple cup of coffee. I find it absurd, to even argue that it is possible to abort a CH episode, let alone find cure, and imagine the “compliment” to ones figure with just 4 litres/1 gallon per day, as well as other adverse effects due to excessive use of such high Sucrose (disaccharide C12H22O11) use.
Michael
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