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Many people begin each day with a steaming cup of joe to shake off the
morning fog and jump-start their brain. Whether it's a shot of espresso or a
frothy latte, that caffeine hit is famous for boosting alertness. However, new
research published in the
journal Clinical Neurophysiology reveals that coffee may be
doing more than just waking us up. It could be changing how the brain connects
what we feel to how we move.
Beyond the morning buzz
Researchers led by a team from Aarhus University Hospital in Denmark wanted
to look at how a typical dose of caffeine affects a brain process called
short-latency afferent inhibition (SAI). In simple terms, this is when a
sensation in your body, such as a touch on your wrist, reduces the brain's
response in the motor cortex, helping control how strongly muscles are
activated. It is like a filtering system that keeps your movements smooth and
controlled, which prevents the brain from overreacting to every single touch.
The scientists recruited 20 healthy adults for their experiment. Each
received either 200 mg of caffeine (equivalent to a typical daily consumption)
delivered in chewing gum for faster absorption or a placebo gum. The study was
double-blind, so neither the participants nor the researchers knew which gum
was administered during the test.
Then they stimulated the motor cortex with magnetic pulses and measured SAI
using two different techniques. The traditional method (conventional amplitude,
A-SAI) uses a fixed magnetic pulse and measures the size of the resulting
twitch. The second technique (threshold tracking, T-SAI) automatically adjusts
the pulse strength to maintain a constant muscle response.
With the first technique, researchers found that caffeine increased the
brain's ability to reduce muscle response after a touch. This effect was most
pronounced between 19 and 21 milliseconds after stimulation. With the second
technique, no significant caffeine boost was detected.
"Caffeine enhances SAI as evaluated with the conventional A-SAI
protocol, but not with the threshold-tracking method," commented the team
in their paper.
Modifying brain chemistry
The research team believes that caffeine likely works by blocking adenosine receptors, which may
lead to an increase in acetylcholine, a chemical
messenger that helps control sensory-motor integration.
"Caffeine's effect may result from its modulation of the cholinergic
system, providing insights into both its physiological action and brain
disorder pathophysiology," noted the researchers.
Ultimately, one of the world's favorite beverages isn't just giving us an
energy boost in the morning. It could also subtly change how sensory signals
influence motor areas of the brain.
Source: Caffeine may influence the way the brain responds to touch

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