Energy Drink Ingredients

Its seems energy drink companies are cramming more and more ingredients into their products. “What do all these ingredients supposedly do to/for my body?”, has become a common question among consumers. So here is a list of the most common ingredients and their alleged effects on the body. Look here for energy drink side effects.

Caffeine

    The most common stimulant, found in coffee, Coke and Mountain Dew. Found in much higher quantities in energy drinks. Most energy drinks contain between 70 and 200 mg. An 8 oz cup of coffee contains 110-150mg for drip, 65-125mg for percolated, and 40-80 mg for instant. Dr. Pepper gives you 41mg, and a can of Coke provides 34mg. A full can of RockStar has 160mg. Caffeine stimulates the central nervous system giving the body a sense of alertness. It can raise heart rate and blood pressure while dehydrating the body. A lot of people experience side effects above 200mg, which include sleeplessness, heart palpitations, headaches, nausea, and most commonly the jitters.
    We’re tracking the caffeine levels of virtually all energy drinks. Go knock yourself out.

For other questions about caffeine visit Caffiene FAQ a great resource for caffeine information.

Taurine

    Taurine is an amino acid that your body naturally produces. It helps regulate heartbeat, muscle contractions, and energy levels. Usually your body makes enough that you don’t need to supplement. It’s thought, but not proven, that under “stress conditions” like illness, physical exertion, or injury, the body does not create enough and supplements can help. Taurine might be a “mild inhibitory neurotransmitter”, some studies show it helps with excitable brain states. While this isn’t exactly what we want, maybe it helps level us out so we function better with elevated levels of other stimulants.

Guarana

    Guarana comes from plants in South America. Amazonians have used it for a long time to increase alertness and energy. It’s more dense in caffeine than coffee beans (3-4% vs 1-2%). It’s not just called “caffeine” because it contains a couple other things: theobromine and theophylline. They’re found in coffees and teas, and are known stimulants. Marketing will sometimes call this one guaranine, as if it’s something different. It’s not.

B Vitamins

    These are essentially the things that help you convert food to energy, like sugar which is found in abundance in energy drinks. The jury’s still out on whether or not they increase energy levels via supplementation. Search the interweb for info on proper dosing of the different vitamins. Common names for B vitamins are insotol, niacin, riboflavin, cyanocobalamin, and pyridoxine hydrochloride.

Ginseng

    Ginseng, an adaptogenic herb, is known to increase energy, has some anti-fatigue components, supposedly relieves stress, and increase memory. Right now it’s suspected that ginseng helps stimulate the hypothalamic and pituitary glands, which then secrete something called adrenal corticotropic hormone. With a name like that, it can’t possibly be bad. Ginseng is nothing that’s naturally created by your body, so having this in your drink certainly won’t hurt. 200mg/day seems to be the standard dose, but you can safely take up to 2700mg. Rare side effects such as diarrhea and headache have been reported.

Ginkgo Biloba

    This ingredient is named after the rare tree it originates from. It is believed to help with memory retention, concentration, circulation, acts as an anti-depressant, and even shows signs of helping people with Alzheimer’s. The German government recognizes it as something that helps with memory loss, concentration, and depression. 60mg is a standard supplementation dose, and you can easily take 240mg. It is advised, however, that most energy drinks do not contain enough ginkgo to be of any benefit. People on anti-depressants shouldn’t take ginkgo and some of the other side effects include blood thinning, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, headaches, dizziness, heart palpitations, and restlessness.

L-Carnitine

    An amino acid usually created by your liver and kidneys, this stuff helps up your metabolism and energy levels. Because of the way it interacts with your body, it may act as a thermogenic and help increase weight loss and endurance during exercise. The jury’s still out on whether or not you need to supplement unless you have an unusual diet, but you can take 2-6 grams without worry. Make sure you get L-Carnitine, which is the type your body creates and can use. D-Carnitine is “inactive” and may actually hurt endurance levels. Rare side effects include include nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and diarrhea.

Sugars

    Glucose is the body’s preferred fuel. That’s why you get hyper with a lot of sugar. Energy drinks contain a ton of sugar. Therefore, energy. It’s a carbohydrate, and a lot of exercise regiments suggest a good dose of carbs for workouts lasting more than an hour. However, to much sugar intake has been linked to diabetes. See the sugar in energy drinks database for a sortable table of beverage sugar content.

Anti-oxidants

    Anti-oxidants are things that help your body gracefully recover from the damage of free radicals. Vitamin C is an anti-oxidant, so claiming that your energy drink has a lot of anti-oxidants is like saying you’re buying really expensive orange juice. But they’re good, they help fend off illness and prevent cellular damage. Vitamins C and E, Vitamin A (aka retinol, beta-carotene), and selenium are all anti-oxidants.

Glucuronolactone

Glucuronolactone (DGL) occurs naturally in the human body as glucose is broken down by the liver. All connective tissue contains this compound. DGL is believed to aid in detoxification, freeing hormones and other chemicals, and the biosynthesis of vitamin C. It is placed in energy drinks because it is believed to help with glycogen depletion by preventing other substances from depleting glycogen supplies in the muscles.

Yerba Mate

This substance is derived from leaves of a shrub in the Holly family. It is a natural source of caffeine, but some believe that the form of caffeine in Yerba Mate’ doesn’t produce the negative side affects like the caffeine in coffee and guarana.

Creatine

Creatine is naturally obtained by eating meat. Creatine helps with supplying energy to the muscles and is usually found in energy drinks and products that are marketed to body builders.

Acai Berry

This ingredient (pronounced ah-sah-ee) is finding its way into more and more energy drinks. Acai berry comes from the Acai Palm tree which is found in South America. The berries are rich in anti-oxidants, but not as much as a concord grape or blueberry. Most of the acai berry benefits have no scientific basis and are attributed to marketing hype.

Milk Thistle

This ingredient mainly found in Rockstar and a few other drinks is used as a liver detoxifying agent. It is placed in energy drinks not really for any energy enhancing properties but as a counter agent to mixing energy drinks with alcohol as milk thistle is supposed to help with hangovers and detoxing the liver from alcohol. However, studies show that the amount put in energy drinks would be of hardly any benefit to consumers.


Sources: Kavita M. Babu, MD, Richard James Church, MD, William Lewander, MD. “Energy Drinks: The New Eye-Opener For Adolescents”. Clinical Pediatric Emergency Medicine. 2008

Wikipedia

Bodybuilding.com

How do energy drinks help with exercise?

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98 Comments

Pages: « 1 [2] 3 4 5 »

lucy October 12th, 2008 11:24 am

dont drink them

britton October 13th, 2008 6:43 pm

in it there is an extract for bulls balls

britton October 13th, 2008 6:44 pm

is it true

Daivs October 14th, 2008 9:25 pm

Hey i have to do a grade 8 science experament and need to know how energy drinks are made.

madi October 15th, 2008 1:14 pm

if im doing a science fair project and having teens drink an energy drink and then run a mile….is that ok? or could it be harmful?

ted October 16th, 2008 1:28 pm

hey madi, not sure where you go to school, but as a former science teacher in the USA, you would have to get consent from your participants and probably parents as well as work under the supervision of a health professional like a nurse or a doctor.

james October 18th, 2008 10:14 pm

err, i think that it depends on the ammount you use, not if you use, and that you should only have like 3 a month, and use em before a sports game, im planning on making a label here, but i think that is too dumb for me, i just wanna test what i could do!

Abbey October 19th, 2008 3:32 pm

I hear that monster has some type off animal pee in it is that true?

sammi13 October 23rd, 2008 10:02 am

I love energy drinks the taste so good espesially monster and rockstar!!!

Ash October 26th, 2008 3:07 pm

thanks alot i got my project done

stefanie October 28th, 2008 2:21 am

im doing an advanced project on the sugar content of different energy drinks. basically finding out is if what you read on the label is what you get. does anyone at all know how i can measure the sugar content of energy drinks?? cannot find any methods!

James October 29th, 2008 5:00 pm

Guarana is icky!

gertrude(trudy) October 30th, 2008 4:49 am

i read somewhere that guarana is good for you. Is that true?

peter October 31st, 2008 10:11 am

I have always loved Energy drinks but with that information, i say no more.

araceli November 1st, 2008 6:18 pm

i heard that some ingridirnts in energy drinks come from animal vomit…is that true? does l-carniture come from vomit since it is from the liver and kidneys?

Taurine November 4th, 2008 7:42 am

I love Bull bile!!!!! thats why i drink energy drinks!!!!:):):):)

Kelsey November 5th, 2008 11:41 am

are these ingredients in every energy drinks? or is this just in red bull?

juice recipes November 5th, 2008 7:23 pm

there’s a great new energy drink out thats made with all the good stuff including greentea extract and gochi.

blake colvin November 6th, 2008 11:51 am

this stinks you all need to fix this crap up u

taurine November 12th, 2008 6:25 am

green tea gots bile too!!!!! WOOO!!!!!:):):):):):):)

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