A daily cup of coffee can prevent retinal damage that may occur due to glaucoma, ageing and diabetes, a new study has found.
Raw coffee is, on average, just 1 per cent caffeine, but it contains 7 to 9 per cent chlorogenic acid (CLA), a strong antioxidant that prevents retinal degeneration in mice, according to researchers from Cornell University.
The retina is a thin tissue layer on the inside, back wall of the eye with millions of light-sensitive cells and other nerve cells that receive and organise visual information.
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In the study, mice eyes were treated with nitric oxide, which creates oxidative stress and free radicals, leading to retinal degeneration, but mice pretreated with CLA developed no retinal damage.
The study is "important in understanding functional foods, that is, natural foods that provide beneficial health effects," said Chang Y Lee, professor of food science and the study's senior author.
Lee's lab has been working with Sang Hoon Jung, a researcher at the Functional Food Center of the Korea Institute of Science and Technology in South Korea.
"Coffee is the most popular drink in the world, and we are understanding what benefit we can get from that," Lee said.
Previous studies have shown that coffee also cuts the risk of such chronic diseases as Parkinson's, prostate cancer, diabetes, Alzheimer's and age-related cognitive declines.
Since scientists know that CLA and its metabolites are absorbed in the human digestive system, the next step for this research is to determine whether drinking coffee facilitates CLA to cross a membrane known as the blood-retinal barrier.
If drinking coffee proves to deliver CLA directly into the retina, doctors may one day recommend an appropriate brew to prevent retinal damage.
Also, if future studies further prove CLA's efficacy, then synthetic compounds could also be developed and delivered with eye drops.
The study was published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.