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Caffeine Blues: Wake Up to the Hidden Dangers of America's #1 Drug

Caffeine Blues: Wake Up to the Hidden Dangers of America's #1 Drug

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Author: Stephen Cherniske
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Category: Book

List Price: $14.95
Buy New: $2.02
You Save: $12.93 (86%)



New (36) Used (44) from $2.02

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 46 reviews
Sales Rank: 37111

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 464
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.2 x 1.3

ISBN: 0446673919
Dewey Decimal Number: 613.84
EAN: 9780446673914
ASIN: 0446673919

Publication Date: December 1, 1998
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: New - Has remainder mark. Fast shipping from trusted wholesaler with many exclusive publisher contracts.

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Caffeine Blues: Wake Up to the Hidden Dangers of America's #1 Drug
  • Unknown Binding - Caffeine Blues: Wake Up to the Hidden Dangers of America's #1 Drug

Accessories:

  • Tanita BC533 Glass Innerscan Body Composition Monitor

Similar Items:

  • The DHEA Breakthrough
  • The Metabolic Plan: Stay Younger Longer
  • Sugar Blues
  • The World of Caffeine: The Science and Culture of the World's Most Popular Drug
  • Welcome to the Dance: Caffeine Allergy - A Masked Cerebral Allergy and Progressive Toxic Dementia

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Get ready to give up that morning latte and kiss cola goodbye. Here comes Caffeine Blues, by Stephen Cherniske, M.S., the first book to expose the dark side of America's No. 1 drug: caffeine. If you are one of the nearly 80 percent of Americans hooked on caffeine--a natural component of coffee, tea, and chocolate and a common ingredient in drugs, soda, candy, and other products--this book will be a wake-up call.

In Caffeine Blues, Cherniske, a nutritional biochemist with more than 25 years of academic research and clinical experience and author of the bestseller The DHEA Breakthrough, reveals the truth about caffeine and explains how to kick the habit forever. Cherniske discusses how caffeine affects the body and brain and why it can increase your risk of dozens of health disorders ranging from osteoporosis, diabetes, and PMS to hypertension and heartburn. After spending 300 pages documenting all of caffeine's evils, Cherniske finally offers a decaffeinated life line: "Off the Bean and on to Vitality," a step-by-step, clinically proven program to help readers kick the habit and boost energy levels naturally. --Ellen Albertson

Product Description
Get ready to give up that morning latte and kiss cola goodbye. Here comes Caffeine Blues, by Stephen Cherniske, M.S., the first book to expose the dark side of America's No. 1 drug: caffeine. If you are one of the nearly 80 percent of Americans hooked on caffeine--a natural component of coffee, tea, and chocolate and a common ingredient in drugs, soda, candy, and other products--this book will be a wake-up call.In Caffeine Blues, Cherniske, a nutritional biochemist with more than 25 years of academic research and clinical experience and author of the bestsellerThe DHEA Breakthrough, reveals the truth about caffeine and explains how to kick the habit forever. Cherniske discusses how caffeine affects the body and brain and why it can increase your risk of dozens of health disorders ranging from osteoporosis, diabetes, and PMS to hypertension and heartburn. After spending 300 pages documenting all of caffeine's evils, Cherniske finally offers a decaffeinated life line: "Off the Bean and on to Vitality," a step-by-step, clinically proven program to help readers kick the habit and boost energy levels naturally. --Ellen Albertson


Customer Reviews:   Read 41 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Buy this book!   July 27, 2008
Although the medical explanations regarding the many negative effects of caffeine are lengthy, they leave you with no doubt about the validity of the author's argument. (And you might even learn something about the way your body works!) I now recommend this book to everyone I know that drinks coffee, and have myself stopped ingesting caffeine as a result of reading this book. If you are at all interested in learning more about the effects of caffeine, you will not regret buying this book!


5 out of 5 stars Great book   May 7, 2008
This is an excellent book about the adverse effects of caffeine. The books explains how coffee and caffeine use increases stress hormones like adrenaline and cortisol in the blood and leads to fatigue, depression and hunger. It explains how it raises insulin levels and stains teeth, increases muscle tension and pain and is connected to increased h pylori levels. It's basically a nightmare - and everyone including doctors and little kids are addicted to it.

People defend it and say how they love it (like loving it is somehow unique to them) because they are addicted to it. If they stop, they will endure devastatingly painful withdrawal symptoms including headaches, body aches, fatigue, constipation and the worse - depression. And though a lot of these withdrawal symptoms pass within a week or so of no caffeine, mild fatigue and depression can continue for a couple of months. Addicted people, and the addiction is secured with less than one cup of coffee a day, must have their coffee or the price will be severe. This is why people "love coffee". They are addicts keeping withdrawal at bay.

I quit coffee using this book. I found it harder than quitting smoking - and I quit from just one cup a day. Very worth it though, once you get pass the caffeine withdrawal hell, which takes time. It doesn't help when everyone and their diabetic mom and doctor is gulping down the stuff all around you. Some of the positives:

Weight loss - 20 lbs in 3 months without deliberately changing anything. I simply stopped craving sugar and junk food and lost that crazy hunger I would get some hours after having coffee. I didnt just lose weight, I got leaner, more muscular.

Better sleep and much better complexion and skin tone.

I go to the bathroom normally now and have no stomach issues.

Much healthier gums. My dentist asked me what I was doing different and when I told him he says - no that can't be it as he flashed his yellow coffee teeth and told me how he drinks 4 cups a day cause it's healthy. Meanwhile the guy is totally fat with a huge belly.

Definitely though, however you quit coffee/caffeine, it is really hard. I know some other people who have quit caffeine who have conquered other what most people would consider extremely addictive substances and in their opinion they were nothing compared to caffeine. So it's doable and ridiculously worth it but it is hard. And the addicts are everywhere aroung you drinking it and suggesting more fixes.



5 out of 5 stars Etiology Conscious Medical Student Looking for Answers   February 4, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I thought I would add my two bits to the discussion. I am a senior level medical student and weeks away from graduation.

First off, I am not suprised to see some of the asinine, half-witted comments in the "1 star" section as I commonly encounter these same rebuttals both by hospital staff and patients. In fact, during a recent debate with a resident doctor of Internal Medicine in the past week, he made the statements: "you can't trust a dietician" and "caffeine/coffee has NEVER been shown to have any long-term health effects". Wrong, and such a strong statement. While multiple studies do indeed show ambiguity in their results, there are many others which DO unequivocally link caffeine to adverse health outcomes. I have personally done a literature review on caffeine and have discovered many well-built and RECENT studies in the literature to support the author's claims. It is particularly amusing to see people tenaciously defend caffeine and neglect to entertain any discussion with respect to its negative health effects. It's as though you've insulted their mothers!

I embarassingly admit that I have learned more about caffeine from a single chapter in this intriguing text than during my medical training in its entirety. Furthermore, only negative effects were related to me in med-school, never positives. Despite it's ubiquitous presence in society, the physiologic effects of caffeine on the body are not taught in medical school. This may serve to explain why many physicians neglect to broach the discussion on caffeine with their patients.

This brings me to my next thought: The fact that the author is not a doctor/PHD does not preclude the book's credibility. The author is more informed about caffeine than the majority of practicing physicians. He does cite valid studies which I assert, are appropriately interpreted. With access to Pubmed (a search tool that allows access to virtually any journal in print) I have personally and randomly clarified several of the references he lists, for verification. What difference does it make if a well-informed nutritionist or physician accesses the forum by which researchers exchange information?

For those who argue that the recent studies are not cited, let the reader bear in mind that this book was published in 1996. Since, there have been multiple studies to show adverse health effects of caffeine.

Lastly, while it may be touted that coffee has been shown to contain anti-oxidants which can reduce the likelihood of developing cancer, it also contains diterpenes, molecular compounds that increases your risk for heart attack. Why take the bad with the good? There are a vast array of food products that contain anti-oxidants, without the diterpenes present.

This is great book for lay-people and health professionals alike. It's definitely worth a read, especially if you have your suspicions about coffee or if you're a practicing physician who prefers to exhaust conservative measures before resigning to medical therapy.



5 out of 5 stars suffered for 25 yrs   November 11, 2007
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I've been a coffee lover since I was a kid. I was diagnosed with depression/anxiety 15 yrs ago,I'm now 40. Med's never helped, tried them all. Then was diagnosed with mild bi-polar,which I thought was ridiculous. Ended up going to a Psychiatrist and he told me my problem was ADD and put me on Adderall. I did great at first but then it started pooping out on me and I realized that the ADD med's felt just like 10 cups of coffee so I knew I had to quit them both. Then I read Caffeine Blues and am a new woman. I've weaned down to 2oz.and am feeling good. Coffee was harder to quit than the amphetamines. I've gone much slower than the book recommends and am still have withdrawal symptoms, needing a nap at noon, sleeping only 6.5 hrs at night, but I know this will pass. This book has saved my life.


5 out of 5 stars Do yourself a favor and read this.   August 27, 2007
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

There is surprisingly very little clear information out there on the effects of caffeine on the body when I initially started searching on-line. I was what is considered a "moderate" coffee drinker - one to two strong mugs in the morning for about 20 years. I have not had caffeine for a month now and I am quite amazed about the positive changes in my body, energy level and mood. I read this book after I stopped, but I wish someone had given it to me years ago. Caffeine is a drug and for those who jump on the defensive bandwagon if someone just brings up the idea it may not be good for you, take a deep breath. All he is suggesting is that some people (like myself) may have more sensitivity to it and owe it to ourselves to see what happens if we stop. The other important point is that there are major industries with HUGE vested interests in keeping people addicted to their products. He raises points that should be discussed and I wish more people would. Like a previous reviewer, I think the book should be updated and wish there was a current web-site out there to help inform people. I have ordered another book which looks interesting - The Truth about Caffeine - and will see how that ranks with Caffeine Blues. So, for anyone wondering - do yourself a favor read the book and see what happens if you get off the caffeine rollercoaster. In my case, my sleep is more restful than I ever recall having and no more peaks and valleys of energy during the day. And for those worried about gaining weight....well, I am actually losing weight and don't find myself wanting to snack nearly as much. Go figure.


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