For about 30 percent of the population, coffee stimulates more than just the brain. According to a study in Gut, coffee can trigger activity at the other end, in the colon. Researchers arenโt exactly sure why coffee makes some people need to defecate, but they have some hypotheses — and theyโve ruled out a few reasons, too.
Itโs Not the Caffeine
Although caffeine is a stimulant, itโs not the chemical stimulating the colon. Soda doesnโt make people need to go number two, and researchers have found that coffeeโs effect occurs with both caffeinated and decaffeinated coffee.
Itโs Not That Coffeeโs a Diuretic
The urge to defecate also doesnโt come from any diuretic effect that coffee has.
First, if coffee were a diuretic, it would have an opposite effect. It would make people need to urinate, which would dehydrate them and could, potentially, lead to constipation. In other words, needing to pee after you drink coffee wouldnโt make you need to poop — itโd do the exact opposite.
Second, while caffeine is recognized as a diuretic, a study in the Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics threw coffeeโs diuretic properties into question. Similar to how people build up a tolerance to caffeineโs stimulating effects on the brain, study participants built up a tolerance to the diuretic effects of caffeine.
Itโs Partly Because Coffee Stimulates the Colon
The study in Gut took a close (really close) look into how coffee affected a few participants digestive system, and the researchers found that coffee stimulated the distal colon. They arenโt sure why it cause the colon to become more active, but the increased activity would certainly lead to a need to defecate at times.
Thus, this at least one mechanical reason why coffee can make you poop, but scientists still donโt know why it happens.
It Could Be Because Coffee is Acidic
Another theory suggests that the acids in coffee could make some people need to go. Chlorogenic acid, specifically, decreases the pH in the stomach (making the stomach more acidic). Chlorogenic acid also prompts the stomach to produce more acid, which further lowerโs the stomachโs pH. A big decrease in the stomachโs pH could cause the stomach to empty its contents more quickly than it otherwise would, which would eventually lead to a need to go number two.
Some chemicals in coffee may further add to this theory. There may be chemicals that make the body release hormones which speed up the digestive process. There are over 1,000 compounds in coffee, though, and scientists donโt know which ones, if any, do this.
It Could be Habit
Finally, for some people, going after drinking coffee could simply be a habit. Peopleโs bodies naturally fall into patterns, and some people may simply be used to going after having a cup of coffee, especially if they drink coffee at the same time every day.
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