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An Overview of Research on the Potential Health Benefits of Tea

Chinese Tea 2007-06-01 source:

  • An epidemiological study conducted by the University of North Carolina found consumption of the equivalent of 2.5 cups of tea per day or more was associated with a 60 percent drop in rectal cancer risk among Russian women from Moscow, as compared to women who drank relatively less than 1.2 cups of tea per day. Those women who drank approximately 1.2 to 2.5 cups of tea per day had a 52 percent reduction in the risk of rectal cancer23.
  • Based on data from the NHANES I Follow-Up study (NHEFS), researchers found that tea drinkers had about a 42 percent reduced risk of colon cancer as compared to non-tea drinkers. Men who drank more than 1.5 cups of tea per day were found to have a 70 percent lower colon cancer risk24.
  • Researchers who followed a group of over 34,000 postmenopausal healthy women between 55 - 69 years of age for 12 years found that those consuming high levels of catechins experienced up to a 45 percent decrease in the instances of rectal cancer. Catechins are a class of flavonoids found in tea, fruits and vegetables. Catechins derived from tea were most strongly linked to a decrease in rectal cancer25.
  • The Iowa Women's Study, which followed post-menopausal women between the ages of 55 and 69 for eight years, found that participants who drank two or more cups of tea per day had a 32 and 60 percent reduced risk of developing digestive and urinary tract cancers, respectively26.
  • A study conducted with members of the Shanghai Cohort (18,244 men aged 45-64 years at recruitment with up to 12 years of follow-up) discovered a statistically significant inverse relationship between positive tea polyphenol levels (as measured in urine) and gastric cancer27.
  • A large population-based case-control study found an inverse relationship between Green Tea consumption and the risk of colon, rectal and pancreatic cancer. Male participants, who drank the equivalent of 4.5 servings of tea per day, had an 18 percent decrease in colon cancer risk and 28 percent decreased risk of rectal cancer. Female participants, who drank 3 servings of tea per day, were observed to have a decreased risk of colon and rectal cancer by 33 percent and 43 percent, respectively. Risk of pancreatic cancer was also reduced in both men and women by 37 percent and 47 percent respectively28.
  • Researchers examined whether a combination of two compounds known to exhibit anti-cancer activity, Green Tea polyphenol, EGCG, and sulindac (a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug), would work synergistically to prevent colon cancer carcinogenesis in rats. Findings suggested that EGCG and sulindac worked together to suppress pre-cancerous lesion formation by enhancing programmed cell death, or apoptosis29.
  • Researchers sought to investigate the effect of Black Tea polyphenols (BTP) on induced DNA damage to colon mucosa in an animal model. Findings suggest that induced DNA damage to the colon mucosa is prevented by consumption of Black Tea polyphenols
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