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Inside the Crazy Lab Where the Army Spikes Its Rations With Caffeine

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Inside the Crazy Lab Where the Army Spikes Its Rations With Caffeine

It’s easy to think of caffeine and our national obsession with stimulants as a recent phenomenon, but it’s not. Consider this statement: “A chemical substance which stimulates brain, nerves, and muscles, is a daily necessity and is used by every single nation. When there is fatigue and the food is diminished such a stimulant is indispensable, and must be an ingredient of every reserve and emergency ration.” That’s from the 1896 Report of the Secretary of War, and more than a century later, the U.S. military is still trying to figure out how best to caffeinate soldiers. A handy result of this is that military scientists have conducted some of the most useful research on caffeine.

The Science of Zapplesauce and Caffeinated Meat Sticks

Some of that research is conducted at the Natick Soldier Research, Development and Engineering Center, half an hour west of Boston. It would look like a large suburban office park but for the soldiers standing guard at a gatehouse complete with a blast barrier. Since 1962, the height of the Cold War, researchers at Natick have been developing products to improve conditions for soldiers in the field.

One of the buildings at Natick has a brightly lit room called the Warfighter Cafe. That’s where Betty Davis, who leads the Performance Optimization Research Team, showed me a small table covered with snack foods—applesauce, beef jerky, energy bars, and nutritious “tube foods,” which taste like pudding but come in a package that looks like a large tube of Crest. The products have two things in common. They are formulated for soldiers (“warfighters” in the current Department of Defense lexicon). And they all contain added caffeine.

Davis showed me a plastic-wrapped ration, about the size of a small hardcover book. It’s called a First Strike ration, a concentrated package of nutrition designed for soldiers moving quickly with minimal gear. The First Strike rations include plenty of caffeine.

For starters, there is Stay Alert gum, with five pieces per pack, each piece containing 100 milligrams. This was originally developed by a subsidiary of Wrigley, working with researchers at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research. And there is Zapplesauce, caffeinated applesauce. It comes in a plastic pouch and packs 110 milligrams of caffeine. There is a mocha-flavored First Strike Nutritious Energy Bar, also packing 110 milligrams of caffeine. Some of the rations also include instant coffee (which soldiers sometimes put between their cheek and gum, like a dip of Skoal, a sort of do-it-yourself version of the Grinds Coffee Pouches) or caffeinated mints. [An average 8 oz. cup of coffee has 95 milligrams of caffeine, according to the USDA.]

In a little bowl on the table, Davis had a pile of caffeinated meat sticks that looked like Slim Jims, sliced into two-inch lengths. As I chewed on one—which was delicious—Harris Lieberman, a psychologist with the U.S. Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, walked in and asked, “Are they feeding you already?”

Lieberman, who has studied the drug for three decades, has an encyclopedic knowledge of caffeine. In fact, he has written encyclopedia entries on caffeine. And he understands its advantages for soldiers. He tried a piece of the beef jerky. “It’s really good,” he said, “and it really does completely mask the caffeine
Caffeine’s naturally bitter flavor presented a challenge when developing Stay Alert gum. “The formulation is not optimized the way a gum is normally optimized to get the sustained flavor and the pleasurable flavor,” he said. “The whole point is that you don’t have this very bitter flavor when you start chewing.”

While the flavoring was a challenge, the gum has a big advantage over more traditional caffeine delivery mechanisms: The caffeine tends to be absorbed sublingually in the mucous membranes. Scientists at Walter Reed Army Institute of Research found that the caffeinated kick of gum takes full effect within five to ten minutes, as opposed to thirty to forty-five minutes for caffeine ingested in a pill or a beverage like coffee or cola.

Lieberman said products that offer such rapid delivery of caffeine have applications beyond the military. “Just to give you an example from the civilian sector, if you’re driving and you become sleepy suddenly, you want to be able to quickly fix that problem,” he said. “You don’t want to wait for the caffeine to start working. You want to get the effect as immediately as you possibly can, before you have an accident. And certainly there are a lot of potential military applications, where you need to solve the problem immediately. Minutes can make a difference in these situations.”

http://www.wired.com/opinion/2014/03/military-obsession-with-caffeine/

 
I can't stomach anything with caffeine, it screws up my insides... would be a shame if I couldn't do my job because someone "laced" my food with drugs!
 
RoyalDrew said:
I can't stomach anything with caffeine, it screws up my insides... would be a shame if I couldn't do my job because someone "laced" my food with drugs!

Not that it would apply now, but MARS Officer or AEC is probably not for you.  I think I drank 6+ cups of coffee a day while at sea, and the only people I've seen down more of the stuff were the AECs I went on EX with later on.

I'm down to 1 (or none) now.
 
Dimsum said:
Not that it would apply now, but MARS Officer or AEC is probably not for you.  I think I drank 6+ cups of coffee a day while at sea, and the only people I've seen down more of the stuff were the AECs I went on EX with later on.

I'm down to 1 (or none) now.

People look at me funny when I tell them I don't drink coffee.  I used to love coffee and would drink it regularly but I developed a reaction to anything with caffeine so I can't drink it anymore, unless it's decaf.
 
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