Study Suggests Green Tea Could Help Protect
Against DementiaBy Stephen Daniells
Decision News
01/03/2006 - Drinking more than two cups of green tea a day
could cut the risk of dementia by half, claims a
population-based study of elderly Japanese subjects.
“Any association between the intake of green tea, a drink
with little toxicity and no calorific value, and cognitive
function could have considerable clinical and public health
relevance,” wrote lead author Shinichi Kuriyama from the Tohoku
University Graduate School of Medicine, Japan.
Green tea is a rich source of catechins, compounds suggested
to play a beneficial role in weight loss, cardiovascular and
oral health, with some, namely epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG),
now emerging as particularly powerful.
The new study, published in The American Journal of
Clinical Nutrition (Vol. 83, pp. 355-361), analysed the
consumption of six drinks (green, black and oolong tea, coffee,
cola or juice, and 100 per cent vegetable juice) for 1003
Japanese subjects with an average age of 74.
The analysis was done using the Comprehensive Geriatric
Assessment (CGA) questionnaire, which also asked about 55 other
food items, as well as demographic, social, lifestyle, and
physical habits of the participants.
Cognitive function was tested using the Mini-Mental State
Examination (MMSE), which has a maximum score of 30 points.
Three cut-offs were used to discriminate levels of cognitive
impairment: less than 24 for severe, 24 to 26 for medium, and
26 to 28 for slight impairment.
Using the cut-offs, 85.3 per cent of people who drank less
than three cups of green tea a week had some level of cognitive
impairment.
Only 59.8 per cent of people who drank more than two cups a
day had some level of cognitive impairment (39.2 per cent with
slight impairment).
After statistical analysis, using the cut off at less than
26 points, the researchers found that people who drank more
than two cups of green tea per day had a 50 per cent lower
chance of having cognitive impairment, compared to those who
drank less than three cups a week.
“In contrast, a weak or null relation between consumption of
black or oolong tea or coffee and cognitive impairment was
observed,” reported Kuriyama.
“Green tea polyphenols, especially EGCG, might explain the
observed association with improved cognitive function… Green
tea contains 67.5 mg catechins per 100 mL, whereas black tea
contains only 15.5 mg per 100 mL,” said Kuriyama.
EGCG is said to be brain permeable, and its protection of
the brain is proposed to be due to mechanisms other than its
antioxidant and iron-chelating properties.
Possible mechanisms included “modulation of cell survival
and cell cycle genes and promotion of neurite overgrowth
activity.”
The study does have limitations, with the authors noting:
“Healthier and more active individuals might have more
opportunities to consume green tea. Among the Japanese, green
tea is often consumed as a social activity, and this in itself
may contribute to maintaining higher cognitive function.”
This study is good news for both the tea market and the tea
extract market. European demand for tea extracts is currently
surging, having reached 500 metric tonnes by 2003.
This has seen companies such as DSM, with its Teavigo
boasting 95 per cent purity of EGCG, and Taiyo International,
with its Sunphenon claiming more than 90 per cent purity,
position themselves firmly in specific catechin markets.
The global tea market is worth about €790 (£540, $941)
million. Green tea accounts for about 20 per cent of total
global production, while black tea (green tea that has been
oxidized by fermentation) accounts for about 78 per cent.
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