Learn why you go to the bathroom after drinking coffee

Researchers have found that this has to do with our microbiotics. Many people drink coffee to get much needed morning energy, but we also know coffee stimulates our digestive system, writes “IconStyle” While this drink so popular has long been thought as an excellent way to promote movement [...]
Many people drink coffee to get much needed morning energy, but we also know coffee stimulates our digestive system, writes “IconStyle”
While this drink so popular has long been thought of as an excellent way to promote the movement of the intestines, no one has been able to explain why so far.
Scholars from the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston recently conducted a study to learn why coffee has an impact on the solvent of the digestive system and introduced the results in the week of digestive disease.
Researchers gave the rats caffeine and caffeine - free mice for three days finding that despite caffeine levels, contracting the muscle in the intestines at the end of the study worked better than non - coffee.
So if it's not caffeine that stimulates our digestive tract, then what is it? Researchers have found that this has to do with our microbiotics.
Researchers conducted another experiment by mixing mice with coffee and observing the presence of bacteria in the days ahead.
The higher the amount of coffee (with or without caffeine), the less germs were introduced, and the bacteria in the waste were reduced.
Researchers are not sure if even good bacteria escape from their intestines along with what is bad, and if this method makes a collusion to our intestines, these findings indicate that it is only the intestines of coffee.
This may be good news for those who have problems with waste, but be careful with the amount of caffeine, especially in the evening, since you may lose sleep. The recommended amount of caffeine a day is 400 mg.












