The four studies provided in this evidence set do not contain research on coffee or blood sugar regulation — they examine topics including chokeberry supplementation and cholesterol in men, archaeal microorganisms in the gut, CRISPR gene drives in mosquitoes, and computational classification of membrane transport proteins. Research suggests that a meaningful summary of coffee's effects on blood sugar regulation cannot be drawn from this particular collection of studies, as none of them investigate coffee, caffeine, or glycemic outcomes in any population. Studies indicate that conclusions about coffee and metabolic health require evidence from trials or observational research directly measuring those relationships, which are absent here. Readers seeking a synthesis of coffee's role in blood sugar regulation should consult literature specifically designed to address that question.
Citations from PubMed and preprint sources. Match score (0-100) reflects automated search ranking, not clinical appraisal.
| Title | Type | Year | Direction | Match |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Effects of Chokeberries (Aronia spp.) on Cytoprotective and Cardiometabolic M... | Other | 2023 | Neutral | 100 |
| Expanding the cultivated human archaeome by targeted isolation of novel<i>Met... | Other | 2024 | Neutral | 85 |
| CRISPR-based gene drives generate super-Mendelian inheritance in the disease ... | Other | 2023 | Neutral | 80 |
| Systematic <i>in silico</i> discovery of novel solute carrier-like proteins f... | Other | 2021 | Neutral | 75 |