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A teen chugged a latte, a Mountain Dew and an energy drink. The caffeine binge led to his death

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
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Davis Cripe left home April 26 an active and healthy teenage boy, but in art class that afternoon he fell to his knees and told worried classmates that he felt lightheaded.

He passed out on the floor and was rushed to a nearby hospital. By 3:30 p.m., around the time the final bell rang at school, he was dead.

His sudden death may have remained a medical mystery, the coroner who conducted his autopsy said, if friends hadn't described what Davis ingested during lunch: Enough caffeine to disrupt and ultimately stop his heart.

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On Monday, Richland County Coroner Gary Watts told reporters about the troubling — and what he is sure will be controversial — contributing factors in the South Carolina teenager's death, while standing beside Davis's parents.

“He was a great kid,” said Davis's father, Sean Cripe. “He didn't get mixed up in the wrong things. You worry about their safety, their health, especially once they start driving. But it wasn't a crash that took his life. Instead it was an energy drink.”

In the span of two hours, Davis drank a cafe latte from McDonald's and a large Mountain Dew, then “chugged” a 16-ounce energy drink when he got back to art class, Watts told The Washington Post.

The official cause of death was “caffeine-induced cardiac event causing a probable arrhythmia,” Watts said.


Holding a news conference was difficult for Davis's family, Watts said, but the story of a teen who died after legally purchasing drinks containing a drug many believe is safe is “a conversation worth having.”

“I’m not saying that you’re going to die because you have an energy drink,” Watts told The Washington Post. “It's not the level of caffeine in his system, but the amount of caffeine he took in … in that short period of time affected his heart.”

Watts said it's the first time in his two decades as a coroner that he's seen such a case — although he can't say for sure that other, unexplained deaths didn't have similar causes. Davis's friends were key to helping investigators connect the dots.

[Caffeine could be headed to World Anti-Doping Agency’s prohibited substance list]

Watts concedes that there are conflicting opinions about the dangers of caffeine, even among coroners. And he told The Washington Post that caffeine has different effects on different people.

Still, the Palmetto Poison Center issued an advisory Tuesday after the autopsy reports. It pointed to an FDA recommendation that adults don't consume more than 400 mg of caffeine a day — about four to five cups of coffee. Energy drinks may contain about 300 mg of caffeine.

The American Academy of Pediatrics says children and adolescents shouldn't consume caffeine at all.

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“Consuming large amounts of caffeine can cause heart related problems including increased heart rate, increased blood pressure, and irregular heart rhythm,” the poison center said. “Additionally, vomiting, diarrhea, seizures, and even death can occur.”

But the poison center's warning wasn't the first, and caffeine-related health problems continue to rise alongside the number of products that promise to efficiently pump caffeine into consumers' bloodstreams.

In 2016, the Energy and Sports drink market had $25 billion in sales, an increase of 7 percent in the past five years, according to a report by the market research company Packaged Facts.

The American Beverage Association, which represents 95 percent of energy drink makers, directs its members to advise consumers that they're not recommended for children, pregnant or nursing women.

It also says the drinks shouldn't be marketed to children and that manufacturers “will not promote excessive or unduly rapid consumption of their energy drink products.”

During that period, as The Post's Ariana Eunjung Cha reported, the FDA has investigated the deaths of 13 people that may have been linked to the dietary supplement 5-hour Energy, which contains caffeine. In 2013, the organization got Wrigley to stop making caffeinated chewing gum.

And the FDA has taken aim at the most potent form of caffeine consumers can purchase: bulk bags of the chemical that can cost as little as $10 per pound.

“A single teaspoon can be packed with as much caffeine as 28 cups of regular coffee,” Cha reported.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...-his-death/?tid=pm_pop&utm_term=.f6f051be32db
 
A 16 oz McDonald's Latte has 142 mg caffeine
A 24 oz Mountain Dew (article says large) has 104 mg caffeine
The energy drink (brand unknown) has around 160 mg caffeine

So that's 406 mg total in a very short period of time. The FDA recommends you don't drink more than 400 mg in a day. I wonder if he had a undiagnosed heart problem as well.
 
A 16 oz McDonald's Latte has 142 mg caffeine
A 24 oz Mountain Dew (article says large) has 104 mg caffeine
The energy drink (brand unknown) has around 160 mg caffeine

So that's 406 mg total in a very short period of time. The FDA recommends you don't drink more than 400 mg in a day. I wonder if he had a undiagnosed heart problem as well.
It feels like he would have had some condition that was aggravated by this. 400 mg is a lot, but a Starbucks blonde roast venti has 400 all by itself.
 
A 16 oz McDonald's Latte has 142 mg caffeine
A 24 oz Mountain Dew (article says large) has 104 mg caffeine
The energy drink (brand unknown) has around 160 mg caffeine

So that's 406 mg total in a very short period of time. The FDA recommends you don't drink more than 400 mg in a day. I wonder if he had a undiagnosed heart problem as well.
Had to have had a bad ticker. I've drank Red Bull vodkas all damn day and I'm still alive.
 
It feels like he would have had some condition that was aggravated by this. 400 mg is a lot, but a Starbucks blonde roast venti has 400 all by itself.

I wouldn't know I've never tried it but if someone asked me if they thought ingesting what he ingested was a risk to a normal person's life I would have sincerely doubted it. Certainly not healthy by any means. But I would never think that doing that one time would kill someone.

Now it does make me however wonder if this sort of intake was something that he did often and it caused damage over time that eventually killed him??
 
I have had 3 friends of our family who have died at younger ages. I have often wondered if this was also their cause of death or something linked to it. I mean 2 of the 3 guys were physically fit, but they did drink alot of coffee and energy drinks (their jobs were high stress) and they had to travel a lot. So they were always drinking caffeine. I will never forget we showed up for a golfing weekend and they bought a case of red bull and out of the case I think the rest of the group had 2-3, and those two guys drank the rest. They drank that crap like it was water.

The other one was heavier set, but he always drank at least 2-3 energy drinks a day plus pop.

I just wonder if drinking all those energy drinks could of been the cause? I try to avoid them at all cost and I rarely drink pop anymore. I do drink coffee, but need to stop that soon.
 
I remember drinking two 5 hour energies and a 16 oz monster at about 3 am trying to stay up for a booty call, I passed out about 20 minutes later.
 
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I somewhat regularly drink a large Starbucks coffee in the morning, a 20 ounce of Mountain Dew at lunch, and a Red Bull in the afternoon. Granted that's spread out over the day as opposed to within a one hour period but it's probably a similar level of caffeine.
 
In about a 10 minute span on Saturday I drank 600 mg of caffeine before playing a rugby game. Wasn't my greatest decision.. it was actually pretty dumb. Oh well it put some pep in my step. CSB

Side note, I don't like coffee. It was 2 cans of some energy drink that was vanilla black cherry flavored and actually tasted ok.
 
A 16 oz McDonald's Latte has 142 mg caffeine
A 24 oz Mountain Dew (article says large) has 104 mg caffeine
The energy drink (brand unknown) has around 160 mg caffeine

So that's 406 mg total in a very short period of time. The FDA recommends you don't drink more than 400 mg in a day. I wonder if he had a undiagnosed heart problem as well.

That's the first thing I wondered as well. There had to be something else going on.
 
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