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Tea

It’s the most popular hot drink in the world. With half as much caffeine on average as coffee, tea offers a refreshing pick-me-up without giving you the jitters. But drinking tea is far more than just a civilized habit, it could actually be a lifesaving one. Researchers have found that tea drinkers may have a lower risk of heart disease, stroke, cancer, and – oddly – even tooth decay

What’s it good for?

In the early 1990s, researchers noted that Japanese women who practiced the art of chanoyu, the traditional tea ceremony, had much lower morality rates than other women. It didn’t take scientists long to work out that the chemical compounds in tea – mainly polyphenols, which make up nearly 30 per cent of tea’s dry weight – are among the most potent antioxidants ever discovered. Antioxidants are chemicals that block the effects of free radicals, the rough oxygen molecules that damage cells throughout the body and increase the risk of serious diseases such as cancer.

Incidentally, don’t confuse herbal teas such as camomile with real tea that comes from Camellia sinensis, the tea plant. The green tea popular in Asian countries is simply the steamed and dried leaves of this plant. The everyday tea we drink here, properly called black tea, undergoes a process of fermentation that gives it a stronger flavour and darker colour – and may reduce its levels of health-protective chemical compounds.

Brew some cancer preventions?

Tea has long been recognized in the laboratory as an antioxidant, but study results involving humans have been contradictory. Some epidemiological studies, comparing people who drink tea with those who don’t, claim that drinking tea prevents cancer; others don’t. There have been more studies based on drinking green tea. So the evidence to date is better for green. Studies in China, for example, showed that regular consumption of green tea significantly reduced the risk of stomach and oesphageal cancer. However, a study in the Netherlands found no link between tea consumption and protection against cancer. Because the production process reduces the amounts of antioxidants in black tea, it seems likely that green tea is a more powerful cancer-fighter than black tea, although both teas offer protective benefits.

Green tea high in substances known as catechins. These are potent antioxidants – 100 times more powerful than vitamin C – that appear to protect DNA in cells from cancer-including changes. Black tea also contains catechins but in much smaller amounts.

In skin-cancer studies, laboratory animals that were given green tea developed one-tenth as many tumours as animals that were given water instead. When it comes to preventing skin cancer, green tea seems to be equally effective whether it’s sipped from a cup or applied to the skin. Many cosmetics manufacturers have started adding green tea to skin-care products because its antioxidants effects may reduce wrinkles or other evidence of skin damage.

The US National Chamber Institute is researching green tea as a preventive agent against skin cancer. One study is investigating the protective effects of a pill form of green tea against sun-included skin damage; another is looking at the topical application of green tea in shrinking precancerous skin changes.

While green tea is mainly valued for its cancer-preventing powers, there is some evidence that it may help people who already have cancer. The catechins in green tea inhibit the production of urokinase, an enzyme that cancer cells need in order to grow. It also seems to stimulate the process of programmed cell death, or opoptosis, in cancer cells. In a seven-year study of breast cancer patients, women who drank five cups of green tea a day were less likely to have their concerns spread to lymph nodes than women who drank less.

Heart health and more

Because tea’s polyphenols as such potent antioxidants, they play a protective role throughout the body in any areas that free radicals cause damage, including the arteries. Tea also has antibacterial properties that benefit dental health. Your everyday cuppa may offer:

Drink to your health
Two or three cups of tea a day is probably enough to provide most of its health benefits. Green tea supplements, sold in health-food shops also appear to be effective. The usual dose is 250 to 400mg taken once a day.
One caveat: if you usually drink tea with milk, you might be missing out on some of the health protection. Proteins in milk may bind to tea’s polyphenols and block their beneficial effects.

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