Coffee
You will want to drink a quart…of coffee.
It’s delicious all alone,
It’s also good with doughnuts…black coffee.
Coffee stimulates your urges,
It’s served in local churches,
Keeps the Swedes and the Germans
Awake through the sermons…that coffee.”
---Keillor & Battle
Health records from a recent study of 130,000 people showed that habitual coffee or caffeinated-tea drinkers have a lower risk of dementia and marginally better cognitive performance than those who avoid the drinks. You knew it all the time, right? The report published in the prominent Journal of the American Medical Association illustrated that over 40 years those who routinely drank two or three cups of coffee or one or two cups of tea had a 15-20% lower risk of dementia than those who went without. There were no benefits seen with a greater intake of coffee or tea.
“Our study can’t prove causality, but to our knowledge it is the best evidence to date and it is consistent with plausible biology,” said the study’s lead author Yu Zhang, who studies nutritional epidemiology at Harvard University. Coffee and tea contain caffeine and polyphenols that may protect against brain aging by improving vascular health and reducing inflammation and oxidative stress, where harmful atoms and molecules called free radicals damage cells and tissues. Substances in the drinks could also work by improving metabolic health. Caffeine, for example, is linked to lower rates of type 2 diabetes, a known risk factor for dementia.
The researchers analyzed records of 131,821 volunteers enrolled in two big U.S. public health studies, the Nurses’ Health Study and the Health Professionals Follow-up Study. Both took repeated assessments of the participants’ diets, dementia diagnoses, any cognitive decline they experienced and scores in objective cognitive tests for up to 43 years. Overall, men and women who drank the most caffeinated coffee had an 18% lower risk of dementia compared with those who drank little or none, with similar results seen for tea. The effect seemed to plateau at two to three cups of caffeinated coffee or one or two cups of tea. No link was found between decaffeinated coffee and dementia.
You’ll have to excuse us now while we put on another pot:
“It’s so nice to take to worky and it really makes you perky, it won’t let your thoughts get murky and it’s even great in Turkey…coffee!
Attraction
Do pheromones exist? If physical beauty is a leading attractant of one person to another, how do we account for those couples where it seems out of balance? Is there some esoteric element out there that helps to account for love at first sight? Who put the bomp in the bomp bah bomp bah bomp, who put the ram in the rama lama ding dong? Inquiring minds want to know.
Pheromones do exist. They are substances which are secreted by an individual and received by a second individual of the same species. While they appear to play an important part in the attraction of one animal to another, they seem to have no role in human interaction. Humans have no functioning vomeronasal organ, which processes pheromone signals and rings the gong for animals. Why in the wide wide world of sports has no blues songwriter ever tackled the sad fate of the lacking vomeronasal organ? It’s a poser.
There is, however, a steroidal compound called androstadienone. A pharmacological dose of “Andy” is known to facilitate a woman’s sexual response and increase the attractiveness of potential male suitors. A putative pheromone secreted particularly by women is estratetraenol, which (close your eyes) was first isolated from the urine of pregnant gals. The effects of estratetraenol are smaller than those of androstadienone but go in the same direction. Neither of these two compounds, however, is considered anywhere near as effective as the better-known Love Potion #9 whose ingredients are a secret known only to Jerry (the nose) Leiber and Mike (the earlobe) Stoller.
Another possible attractant could be copulins, fatty acids found in vaginal secretions which when smelled by men can affect male hormone levels and perceptions of attractiveness. You have to get awfully close, however, to feel the mighty pull of copulins. Odds are by then you’re pretty attracted already.
Third Penis Never Fails
You’re not going to believe this (and it might make some women nervous) but in 2024 doctors in the United Kingdom reported a case of a man with three penises. It must have happened more than once because the medical people even have a name for the phenomenon—triphallia. People with three penises probably don’t go around talking about it unless they are in the circus so this discovery was only made upon the death of the big swinger.
This startling discovery lends a whole new meaning to the word “threesome.” Also the expression “one on the side.” Sex addicts are relieved to know there is now an alternative for the third wheel while the other two are getting it on.
Meanwhile, back at the ER, physicians report a jump in the number of Headspin Hole cases. The HH is a chronic, benign scalp injury common in breakdancers, characterized by hair loss, inflammation and a tender, fibrous lump on the vertex of the skull caused by years of repetitive friction and pressure during headspins. This activity is not what yo mama meant when she told you to start using your head.
We hate to bring this up but it’s always important to pay attention to the dangers presented by Butt Eels. Doctors in Vietnam reported a patient’s horrific experience after inserting a two-foot-long eel into his rectum just for sport. The eel, hungry, as eels are wont to be, started chewing through the man’s intestines until he cried uncle and dashed off to the hospital. Smirking surgeons were able to save the man’s life, extracting the critter and part of his intestines as well. “Next time, I go back to breakdancing,” the victim said.
Never undercook your bacon. Like Secretary of Health & Human Services Robert F. Kennedy, a 52-year-old Florida man was discovered with a brain worm. We don’t know the cause of RFKJ’s problem but the Florida man had an infection called neurocysticercosis after eating uncooked bacon and subsequently infecting himself through poor hygiene, transferring eggs from his own feces to his mouth. Just to be on the safe side, it’s probably best not to be kissing RFK next time you see him.
Before you go off on a tangent dissing fecal bacteria, however, you should know that recent studies have solidified the notion that fecal transplants (removing fecal bacteria from a healthy person to an unhealthy one) can be an effective treatment for certain severe infections. So let’s not have any more of that talk about “I don’t take no shit from noone.”
Phenomena
1. Elephant Dung Leads To More Guitars. Researchers with nothing better to do recently discovered a critical link between African elephants and ebony trees, which provide the wood traditionally used in guitars and piano keys. The big guys eat the fruits from these trees, carrying the seeds in their digestive tracts for miles before depositing them still intact on the forest floor. UCLA biologist Thomas Smith noted that in areas where these elephants are hunted to extinction there are 70% fewer ebony saplings.
2. Close The Door, They’re Coming In The Windows! Scientists are warning that a little-known group of microbes called free-living amoebae may be posing a global health threat. Found in soil and water, some species can survive extreme heat, chlorine, rap music and even modern water systems—conditions which kill most germs. One infamous example, the “brain-eating amoeba,” can cause deadly infections after contaminated water enters the nose. Even worse, these fiends can act as hiding places for dangerous bacteria and viruses, helping them evade disinfection. Where is RFK Jr. when you really need him?
3. But Officer, It Might Have Been The Fennel! Researchers have now discovered that some people get “drunk” without drinking. Apparently, their gut bacteria can produce alcohol from food. The lab boys have now identified the microbes and biological pathways behind this inconvenient condition as Auto-Brewery Syndrome. Testing has showed that the gut samples of patients with the problem produced far more alcohol than those of healthy people. In at least one case, however, those snappy fecal transplants mentioned above came to the rescue, leading to long-lasting symptom relief. “Holy shit—what a relief!” exulted one of the victims.
4. God Is Not Going To Like This, but researchers at Hiroshima University now contend that life may have started in sticky, rock-hugging gels rather than inside cells. Those wily Japanese suggest these primitive, biofilm-like materials could trap and concentrate molecules, giving early chemistry a protected space to grow more complex. Within these gels, the first hints of metabolism and self-replication may have emerged. We’d be more impressed if Chuck LeMasters hadn’t been telling us the same thing since 1985.
Coffee. And just to complete the cycle, scientists now tell us that roasted coffee may do much more than just wake you up and get you on the bus. It might even control blood sugar. Researchers recently discovered several new coffee compounds that inhibit a-glucosidase, a key enzyme linked to type 2 diabetes. Some of these molecules were even more potent than a common anti-diabetic drug. The study also introduced a faster, greener way to uncover health-boosting compounds in complex foods.
“It can rock it, it can roll it, do the stomp and even stroll it…coffee!
“It warms you to the bone, it complements your scone, it plays your saxophone…coffee!
“You can’t really live without it, there’s no two ways about it, and if you start to doubt it just add some sauerkraut, it makes you want to shout, it saves you from the gout, it turns you inside-out, it’s vital in a drought, I think I’m almost out…COFFEE!”
That’s all, folks….