no
Yes, you can drink black coffee before a blood test. However, it's best to check with your healthcare provider if it is okay to consume any beverages before the test, as certain tests may require fasting for accurate results.
Of course, you can drink coffee as it comes, black coffee, with milk or cream, white coffee, you can add sugar to any combination, black or white sweet coffee.
No. People often drink coffee before, during, and after drinking beer.
Yes, you can drink black coffee before blood work as long as it does not contain cream or sugar. However, it's best to check with your healthcare provider or the lab where you'll have the blood work done to see if there are any specific restrictions for your particular test.
User responses: No. From what I have read caffeine does affect cholesterol levels and/or the way they can be interpreted when reading results of a cholesterol blood test. I would suggest that you be clean of any caffeine - three or more days ahead of time - to obtain a caffeine-free result.Advice seems to vary. Some say that black coffee (no sugar, no milk) is fine. Sources for that listed below.
Yes, im anorexic & all i drink is water & black coffee. Its calorie free & it gives you that energy that you dont get from food. If you drink flavored coffee, theres tons of calories in there so i stick with black.
Ville drinks his coffee black no sugar
With your mouth. Out of a cup Hot or Iced as you like 1/2 of milk 1/2 black coffee with 3 lumps of brown sugar and make sure you put the milk in the microwave for 1 minute before adding the hot coffee.- Lovestinks10Yes, you drink coffee.
It is generally recommended to only consume water before a fasting blood test, as black coffee can potentially affect the results by interfering with certain measurements. However, for regular blood work that does not require fasting, black coffee should not have an impact on the results.
No
I work in a lab and we always tell our patients that they can drink black coffee with no sugar and no cream. So yes you may have plain, black coffee. The cream and sugar from the coffee would falsely elevate your cholesterol.
Water. Anything else will affect the glucose levels...including black coffee.