milk_lover
Member
- Joined
- Aug 15, 2015
- Messages
- 1,909
Most of us know that coffee/caffeine is awesome for liver health and we would like to continue ingesting it without the bad effects like jittering and cortisol levels going up. There are some techniques of course to reduce stress reactions such as consuming the coffee/caffeine with enough sugar, gelatin/glycine, probably coconut oil, etc.,. Can Aspirin help in this regard too?
After reading many posts in this wonderful forum, Ray Peat's article on Aspirin, and looking at the studies haidut brings forward to our attention, I suppose Aspirin can help, why not? We're using coffee/caffeine, mainly I think, to deal with fatty liver, i.e., burning the fat in the liver so as to handle sugar better, right? This induces stress if the type of fat being dumped into the blood stream is unsaturated fat. Well, Aspirin acts like Vit E in that it opposes the effects of unsaturated fat. Also, it has been studied that Aspirin lowers cortisol, so should cortisol levels go up after ingesting caffeine, Aspirin will come help putting it down, will it not? Furthermore, Aspirin lowers serotonin in the gut.. Maybe in some people, coffee/caffeine irritates their stomach linings or something, which will create serotonin in their guts. I'd like to know if this makes sense.
After reading many posts in this wonderful forum, Ray Peat's article on Aspirin, and looking at the studies haidut brings forward to our attention, I suppose Aspirin can help, why not? We're using coffee/caffeine, mainly I think, to deal with fatty liver, i.e., burning the fat in the liver so as to handle sugar better, right? This induces stress if the type of fat being dumped into the blood stream is unsaturated fat. Well, Aspirin acts like Vit E in that it opposes the effects of unsaturated fat. Also, it has been studied that Aspirin lowers cortisol, so should cortisol levels go up after ingesting caffeine, Aspirin will come help putting it down, will it not? Furthermore, Aspirin lowers serotonin in the gut.. Maybe in some people, coffee/caffeine irritates their stomach linings or something, which will create serotonin in their guts. I'd like to know if this makes sense.