Aside from getting into a medical question of interest to me as a voluminous coffee-drinker, this topic also gets into the area of subjective vs. objective evidence which has been raised in many threads in different areas of this forum.
OK, let me start here:
http://bicyclecoffeesystems.com/
This guy is a rabid coffee drinker, and has done a fair job of collecting papers supporting his habit, i.e., supporting the thesis that there is no harmful effect, especially diuretic, from coffee. (Look for the heading "Coffee and Dehydration--Urban Myth" just below the pictures of bicycle-compatible coffee bottles).
These papers make a convincing case that there is no difference in fluid retention from drinking coffee.
Yet I have personal evidence that suggests some connection to dehydration. Some of it is weaker than others, but taken together I feel there's something at odds with the conclusions of those papers, and I want to reconcile it.
Weakest: Coffee affects my singing voice. I'm an amateur singer, no pro but I've sung in some decent choirs and in some stage shows. If I have anything challenging to do (meaning high notes) then coffee seems to have a repeatable negative effect: if I have coffee at all in the hour or so before a performance, I'll choke and cough or otherwise strain myself trying to get the notes. Tea doesn't have this effect (which suggests it's not the caffeine). The best thing is water, especially hot water.
Arguments against this: there is lots of lore in the singing world, some of it scientific, some of it superstition. Singers, like most performers, are a superstitious lot, and one of the biggest enemies of the singing voice is tension. Conceivably, coffee could make me tense just from worrying about it. On the other hand, there could be a physiological connection of coffee -> tension which wouldn't require the "diuretic" explanation.
Stronger: A day of coffee affects my body like a day of not drinking at all. I try to get in 6-8 glasses of water a day. If I do, I wake up feeling good in the morning. If I have little or no liquid during a day, then several physical symptoms will manifest themselves in the morning. From least to most severe (in some cases I get only the first couple, in worst cases all four):
- a lot of coughing in the morning
- (apologies for too much information) strongly-colored urine
- a very dry mouth, to the point where I can barely swallow until I get a little water.
- headaches
I associate all of these symptoms with dehydration from not drinking water. The thing is, I also associate these symptoms with a day in which I have drunk a great deal, almost all of it coffee. This experiment is repeatable.
As I enjoy coffee, I'd be happy to do any controlled experiment anyone wants to suggest. I'll deal with the headaches in the interests of science.
Discussion?
OK, let me start here:
http://bicyclecoffeesystems.com/
This guy is a rabid coffee drinker, and has done a fair job of collecting papers supporting his habit, i.e., supporting the thesis that there is no harmful effect, especially diuretic, from coffee. (Look for the heading "Coffee and Dehydration--Urban Myth" just below the pictures of bicycle-compatible coffee bottles).
These papers make a convincing case that there is no difference in fluid retention from drinking coffee.
Yet I have personal evidence that suggests some connection to dehydration. Some of it is weaker than others, but taken together I feel there's something at odds with the conclusions of those papers, and I want to reconcile it.
Weakest: Coffee affects my singing voice. I'm an amateur singer, no pro but I've sung in some decent choirs and in some stage shows. If I have anything challenging to do (meaning high notes) then coffee seems to have a repeatable negative effect: if I have coffee at all in the hour or so before a performance, I'll choke and cough or otherwise strain myself trying to get the notes. Tea doesn't have this effect (which suggests it's not the caffeine). The best thing is water, especially hot water.
Arguments against this: there is lots of lore in the singing world, some of it scientific, some of it superstition. Singers, like most performers, are a superstitious lot, and one of the biggest enemies of the singing voice is tension. Conceivably, coffee could make me tense just from worrying about it. On the other hand, there could be a physiological connection of coffee -> tension which wouldn't require the "diuretic" explanation.
Stronger: A day of coffee affects my body like a day of not drinking at all. I try to get in 6-8 glasses of water a day. If I do, I wake up feeling good in the morning. If I have little or no liquid during a day, then several physical symptoms will manifest themselves in the morning. From least to most severe (in some cases I get only the first couple, in worst cases all four):
- a lot of coughing in the morning
- (apologies for too much information) strongly-colored urine
- a very dry mouth, to the point where I can barely swallow until I get a little water.
- headaches
I associate all of these symptoms with dehydration from not drinking water. The thing is, I also associate these symptoms with a day in which I have drunk a great deal, almost all of it coffee. This experiment is repeatable.
As I enjoy coffee, I'd be happy to do any controlled experiment anyone wants to suggest. I'll deal with the headaches in the interests of science.
Discussion?