Energy drinks have little to any benefit. Energy drinks have little to any benefit because of how many unnecessary and unknown ingredients are included in the energy drinks and because they won’t increase energy levels. Energy drink companies use many ingredients in their concoction of an energy drink that are unknown or unnecessary. One example of these ingredient is glucuronolactone. This ingredient was tested on rats, it states in paragraph 11 “scientists injected large doses of the substance into laboratory rats.…
I believe the ingredients in these drinks are not helpful to someone expending a lot of energy because it’s not healthy and the energy that’s given off these energy drinks do not last long. Therefore it’s unreasonable to drink energy drink when you can drink water and maybe Gatorade or Powerade.…
Hsu provides appropriate support for thesis. Throughout the argument, Hsu cites from six different journals and articles on the subject. The quotes, examples and statistics all support the reasons why Hsu beliefs on the labeling of these energy drinks. In paragraph 2, Hsu provides statistics from “Teens” on the percentage of teenagers that engage in the drinking of energy drinks, which suggest that this thirty-one...…
Energy Drinks target many teens and adults and are found to dangerous by the FDA with ingredients that damage the body and cause harmful side effects. Energy drinks are bad for your body, and the fake energy in them are extremely harmful. “Energy drinks are canned or bottled beverages sold in convenience stores, grocery stores, bars, and nightclubs in mixed drinks.”(Wong 1) They have a potential to affect your life.…
8. Health experts recently called for warning labels on energy drinks, pointing out the effects of “caffeine intoxication”- a syndrome that can cause anxiety, insomnia, gastrointestinal (stomach) upset, tremors, rapid heartbeat, and even death. Would a warning label affect whether or not you buy energy drinks? Why or why not? This warning label probably wouldn’t prevent me from buying energy drinks. I would assume that to get this disease I would have to drink energy drinks constantly and rapidly.…
The popular demand for energy drinks have placed a certain focus on side effects of consuming these drinks when it comes to children and adolescents. The label reads that children should not consume it, but what defines the term children?…
Over the last decade, drinks containing high amounts of caffeine, sugar, and other ingredients that increase energy have been rapidly growing in popularity. Clearly these beverages are known as energy drinks. Energy drinks have gotten so popular that it is extremely rare to find a convenience store that doesn’t sell a variety of them. Students use energy drinks to cram the night before a test, athletes use them to exercise, party animals mix them with alcohol to drink more than humanly possible, and some people just drink them to stay awake at work after a sleepless night. Red Bull, one of the most popular energy drinks in the market, claim to enhance productivity, concentration, energy and help handle stressful situations. It seemed these beverages were a godsend to overworked employees and sleep-deprived college students. But after a few deaths were linked to the drink, controversy arose. Apparently Red Bull gives you wings, but what other side-effects can these sugary, over-caffeinated drinks cause? Many people have been asking this question lately, wondering how harmful drinking them really is. Despite that consuming a large amount of the drink may be dangerous, as long as people drink energy drinks responsibly they are relatively safe.…
• A study compared the effects of alcohol alone to an alcohol plus energy drink combination. Researchers found that the alcohol plus energy drink significantly reduced subjective alcohol-related symptoms such as headache, weakness, dry mouth, and impairment of motor coordination, even though breath alcohol concentration and objective tests of motor coordination and reaction time didn't reflect this.…
How much would you pay for a drink that revitalizes your body and gives you the feeling of full awareness or even more than normal focus on your everyday tasks? If you are willing to pay the price of a stunt in your growth, seizures, or even your life; energy drinks are for you. Energy drink have become increasingly popular over the last decade due to their promise of increased energy and focus and their easy accessibility to the public of any age. Many people have lost their lives due to allergic reaction to some of the complex wording of its ingredients. Energy drinks have become the shortcut to quick short term energy but could end up being the long term cause of poor health.…
According to the Colorado Gazette, Redline drink and others have been linked to health complications. Like heart problems, hypertension, and others. In Colorado, a school banned these kind of drinks and recommended a 7-11 store to stop selling these. A 15 year old girl, an athlete, was drinking the REDLINE POWER RUSH energy drink, and passed violently shaking and extreme salivitation, she died. several others have been reporting going to the er for chest tightness, shortness of breath, severe heart palpitations, increased heart rate, fixed and dilated pupils and hypertension.…
Attention Grabber: It’s 2a.m and you haven’t even started on the communications assignment due in a couple of hours. You’re sleepy and tired because you just got out of a 12-hour shift over at work. What’s going to give you the energy to stay up and complete this assignment? The most obvious answer, an energy drink. But do you really know what happens inside your body after consuming one of these drinks?…
I understand your view on the banning of alcoholic energy drinks. I agree that it is very dangerous and the harm that it poses is a goo argument for these drinks to be banned. The main reason why it is bad to drink a combination of caffeine and alcohol is because the caffeine shuts down the ability for our brain to let people know they are intoxicated. Therefore they will continue to drink. People mix alcohol and caffeine all the time. But only the marketed caffeinated drinks has gained attention. I do not believe alcoholic energy drinks should be banned from the public, but I do think it is fair to ban these drinks on college campuses. Many college students are out of control. A ban on these drinks should be I affect to protect the safety…
In recent years the consumption of energy drinks combined with alcohol has become popular for young adults in North America. Energy drinks are caffeinated beverages that intend to provide a burst of energy and/or enhance alertness. The principle active ingredients in energy drinks are caffeine, high doses of sugar (or a sugar substitute), they generally include B vitamins, an amino acid, and plant/herbal extracts. Alcohol is a highly addictive and most commonly abused drug in North America that can impair vision, speech, memory, concentration, and reaction times along with other things. These energy drinks being a stimulant combined with alcohol being a depressant, can make a deadly cocktail for many reasons.…
Energy drink has gained a lot of popularity since its debut. Consumption of energy drinks has been increasing dramatically in the last two decades, particularly amongst adolescents and young adults. Energy drinks are aggressively marketed with the claim that these products give an energy boost to improve physical and cognitive performance. However, studies supporting these claims are limited. In fact, several adverse health effects have been related to energy drink; this has raised the question of whether these beverages are safe. There have been several reports that showed adverse health effects associated with energy…
Some people say that energy drinks are not healthy and they prefer to drink water when they are exercising. Some students drink sports drinks like they drink juice, this is harmful for your body. Sports drinks can contain around 158 calories per 20-ounce bottle. These extra calories can quickly lead to weight gain, particularly if you aren’t…