Three caffeinated drinks in short time led to US teenager’s death

Coroner says 16-year-old who collapsed at school had no previous heart conditions

A South Carolina teenager who collapsed in a high school classroom last month died because he drank several highly caffeinated drinks too quickly, a coroner said on Monday.

Davis Allen Cripe (16) drank a latte from McDonald's, a large Mountain Dew soda, and a highly caffeinated energy drink in just under two hours, said Gary Watts, the coroner of Richland County, South Carolina.

Mr Watts told Reuters that physicians on his staff determined that Davis died from a “caffeine-induced cardiac event causing a probable arrhythmia.”

It was likely that caffeine would not have been seen as a factor in his death if it had not been for witnesses who could tell officials what he had to drink before he collapsed during a high school class, Mr Watts said.

READ MORE

He said the primary witness to what the teenager drank could not definitely say what brand of energy drink he had but said it was from a container the size of a large soft drink.

“The energy drink was basically chugged,” Mr Watts said.

He said Davis was considered a healthy teenager and did not have an undiagnosed heart condition. A postmortem showed no sign of a heart condition.

“This is not a caffeine overdose,” Mr Watts said. “We’re not saying that it was the total amount of caffeine in the system, it was just the way that it was ingested over that short period of time, and the chugging of the energy drink at the end was what the issue was with the cardiac arrhythmia.”

Davis weighed a little more than 200 pounds (90 kg) but would not have been considered morbidly obese, Mr Watts said. He died about an hour after collapsing in a high school near Columbia, South Carolina.

He may have had the same amount of caffeine on another day and been all right, Mr Watts said.

“We’re not trying to speak out totally against caffeine,” said the coroner. “We believe people need to pay attention to their caffeine intake and how they do it, just as they do with alcohol or cigarettes.”

The Mayo Clinic said in a March report that up to 400 mg of caffeine a day “appears to be safe for most healthy adults.”

According to caffeineinformer.com, a McDonald’s latte has 142 mg of caffeine, a 20-ounce (590ml) Mountain Dew has 90 mg, and a 16-ounce (473ml) energy drink can have as much as 240 mg.

Reuters