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Ulcerative Colitis and Coffee: Is It Safe?

Ulcerative Colitis and Coffee: Is It Safe?


Coffee and caffeine affect people with UC in various ways. One study showed that 46 percent of participants with UC felt coffee had no effect on their symptoms, while 48 percent felt coffee worsened their symptoms.

Some people with UC may be sensitive to coffee because one of its main components, caffeine, is a stimulant, says Supriya Rao, MD, a gastroenterology, internal medicine, obesity medicine, and lifestyle medicine physician and a professor of gastroenterology at Tufts University in Massachusetts, where she treats people with IBD or other digestive health issues.

“It speeds up motility, which means things move through the gut more quickly,” says Dr. Rao. “That can be helpful for some people, but for people with UC, especially during a flare, that added urgency can make things worse.”

Indeed, research suggests coffee can make many people in general feel like they need to pass a bowel movement.

 It’s that sensation that may be heightened for people with UC. It can also lead to more frequent bowel movements and diarrhea, which are already common symptoms for people with UC, says Kendra Weekley, a registered dietitian at Cleveland Clinic in Ohio, where she focuses on gut health, including working with people with UC and Crohn’s disease within the hospital’s inflammatory bowel disease medical home.

It’s also acidic, which typically isn’t helpful during a flare, when your intestines and stomach lining may be ultra-sensitive, Weekley says.

“Your stomach is already an acidic solution, so with coffee you’re dumping more acidity on top. During active inflammation with ulcerative colitis, it’s like you’re spreading more acidity on an open wound. It’s going to hurt,” she says. This is why you may feel symptoms like cramping, acid reflux and belly pain, too, especially if you’ve consumed coffee on an empty stomach, she says.

Beyond caffeine, a cup of coffee may contain other additives that may irritate the GI lining, including dairy and sweeteners, Rao says. “Many studies and anecdotal reports suggest that caffeine, dairy and artificial sweeteners can trigger symptoms in sensitive individuals,” she says.



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