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Green Tea

Green Tea. Green tea. Camellia sinensis rich in flavonoids, polyphenolic compounds e.g. catechins. Green tea. Animal experiment studies. antioxidative Ho et al., 1922; Serafini et al., 1996 antiinflammatory Mutoh et al., 2000 antimutagenic Kuroda and Hara, 1999; Steele et al., 2000

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Green Tea

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  1. Green Tea

  2. Green tea • Camellia sinensis • rich in • flavonoids, • polyphenolic compounds e.g. catechins

  3. Green tea Animal experiment studies • antioxidative Ho et al., 1922; Serafini et al., 1996 • antiinflammatory Mutoh et al., 2000 • antimutagenic Kuroda and Hara, 1999; Steele et al., 2000 • anticarcinogenic Cao and cao, 1999; Jung and Ellis, 2001 • apoptotic Ahmal et al., 1997 • antiobesity Dulloo et al., 1999; Hen et al,1999 • hypocholesterolemic Yang and Koo, 1997 • antiatherosclerosis Yang and Koo, 2000 • antidiabetic Zeyuan et al., 1998 • antiviral Clark et al., 1999; Mukoyama et al., 1999 • antiaging Esposilo et al., 2002

  4. Anton Rietveld and Sheila Wiseman. Antioxidant Effects of Tea: Evidence from Human Clinical Trials. J. Nutr. 133: 3285S-3292S, 2003. Green tea : antioxidant effects • Tea flavonoids are potent antioxidants. • The scientific support is strongest for the protection of DNA from oxidative damage after black or green tea consumption. • However, the quality of the studies now available is insufficient to draw firm conclusions. • Therefore, further evidence from human intervention studies is required.

  5. Green tea and cancer Blot WJ, Chow WH, McLaughlin JK.Tea and cancer: a review of the epidemiological evidence. Eur J Cancer Prev. 1996 Dec;5(6):425-38. Numerous reports : inhibition of carcinogenesis in experimental animals by tea. Ecological data : considerable international variation in tea consumption but generally small differences in cancer rates. More relevant case-control and cohort studies show mixed results. Further research, is needed before definitive conclusions on tea's impact upon cancer risk can be reached.

  6. Green teaand weight reduction 1 study • green tea increased fat oxidation and thermogenesis in 10 pt • not designed to assess weight loss Am J Clin Nutr 1999; 70: 1040-5

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