Amy Norton, "Green tea may protect the aging brain", Yahoo, February
24, 2006,
Link: http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060224/hl_nm/green_tea_dc
People who regularly drink green tea may have a lesser risk of mental
decline as they grow older, researchers have found.
Their study, of more than 1,000 Japanese adults in their 70s and
beyond, found that the more green tea men and women drank, the lower
their odds of having cognitive impairment.
The findings build on evidence from lab experiments showing that
certain compounds in green tea may protect brain cells from the
damaging processes that mark conditions like Alzheimer's and
Parkinson's disease.
But while those studies were carried out in animals and test tubes, the
new research appears to be the first to find a lower risk of mental
decline among green-tea drinkers, according to the study authors.
They speculate that the possible protective effects of green tea may
help explain Japan's lower rate of dementia, particularly Alzheimer's
disease, compared with Europe and North America.
Dr. Shinichi Kuriyama and colleagues at Tohoku University Graduate
School of Medicine report the findings in the current issue of the
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
The study included 1,003 adults age 70 and older who completed detailed
questionnaires on their diets over the previous month, as well as their
overall physical health and lifestyle habits. They also completed a
standard test of cognitive functions such as memory, attention and
language use.
The researchers found that older adults who drank two or more cups of
green tea per day were about half as likely to show cognitive
impairment as those who drank three cups or less each week. Men and
women who averaged one cup per day fell somewhere in between.
The connection between green tea and mental function persisted when the
researchers accounted for overall diet and factors such as smoking and
exercise habits.
However, the findings cannot demonstrate a cause-and-effect
relationship.
The study was observational, not a controlled experiment, and there may
be something about green-tea drinkers that explains the link between
the beverage and sharper mental function, Kuriyama told Reuters Health.
For example, healthier, more active individuals may simply drink more
green tea -- which, in Japan, is often consumed in social settings.
"We think that the potential protective effects of green tea should be
confirmed in further studies," Kuriyama said.
Given the high prevalence and heavy burden of dementia, the researchers
conclude, any benefit of drinking green tea could have a "considerable"
public health impact.
SOURCE: American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, February 2006.
vernon - 27 Feb 2006 19:11 GMT
> Amy Norton, "Green tea may protect the aging brain", Yahoo, February
> 24, 2006,
[quoted text clipped - 57 lines]
>
> SOURCE: American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, February 2006.
Green tea is not a magic bullet but it is truly amazing for alleviating many
problems.
madthumbs@gmail.com - 27 Feb 2006 23:26 GMT
"Don't drink tea: Tea contains between 4.4 and 12 ppm of fluoride. Just
one cup can be enough for an overdose."
http://www.opposingdigits.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=44
Please Visit http://www.opposingdigits.com/ Blog and forums