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Journal Article

Citation

Liguori A, Hughes JR, Oliveto AH. Exp. Clin. Psychopharmacol. 1997; 5(3): 286-294.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatry, University of Vermont, Burlington 05401-1419, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1997, American Psychological Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

9260077

Abstract

Eight exclusive cola drinkers in Experiment 1 (mean caffeine intake = 157 +/- 74 mg/day) and 16 drinkers of both cola and coffee in Experiment 2 (mean caffeine intake = 579 +/- 201 mg/day) underwent 6 independent, double-blind weekly trials. Each trial began with a randomized cross-over sampling period of 1 day of access to noncaffeinated cola and 1 day of access to caffeinated (33 mg/8 oz) cola. During the subsequent 1- or 2-day test period, participants had unlimited concurrent access to the 2 colas. Reliable caffeine self-administration occurred in 2 of 8 participants in Experiment 1 and in 4 of 16 participants in Experiment 2. Self-reported drowsiness, fatigue, and headache were higher when participants received only placebo colas in Experiment 2, but not Experiment 1. Caffeine self-administration via cola occurs both among people whose primary source of caffeine is cola and among those whose primary source of caffeine is coffee.


Language: en

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