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Tue, 7 Oct 2003 00:38:28 -0500

HSI - Jenny Thompson

Keep it Green

 

Keep it Green

 

Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

 

October 7, 2003

 

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Dear Reader,

 

If you think you've heard it all when it comes to green tea,

then keep reading. Because I've just come across a study that

takes the research of green tea out of the laboratory and

into the homes of more than 1,000 women, with surprising and

promising results concerning the prevention of breast cancer.

 

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In the City of Angels

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A team of researchers from the Department of Preventive

Medicine at the University of Southern California (USC)

interviewed almost 1,100 Asian American women (aged 25 to 74)

living in Los Angeles. 501 women had been diagnosed with

breast cancer, and 594 were cancer-free.

 

Between 1995 and 1998, each subject was interviewed in person

to determine a wide variety of factors, including food and

beverage intake, personal medical history, family health

history, and general lifestyle details such as smoking habits

and alcohol intake. An examination of the data showed that

women in the non-cancer group were much more likely to be

regular green tea drinkers. In fact, on average, those who

drank at least 8.5 milliliters (less than half a cup) of

green tea each day, had a reduced breast cancer risk of

nearly 30 percent. Those who consumed more than 8.5

milliliters reduced their risk even more.

 

This benefit was found only with green tea consumption. Women

who regularly drank black tea didn't reduce their breast

cancer risk.

 

-----------------------------

Cutting off the supply

-----------------------------

 

Writing in a recent issue of the International Journal of

Cancer, the USC researchers noted that the reduction in

breast cancer risk among the green tea drinkers held true

even among women who had a family history of breast cancer as

well as among women who smoked or ate processed foods.

Exercise habits - either good or bad - also did not play a

role in the outcome for green tea drinkers.

 

The conclusions of this study support the important results

of a 2002 laboratory study. According to a report in Science

News, researchers at the University of California and the

University of Texas found that green tea extract may prevent

breast cancer cells from manufacturing the new blood vessels

necessary to promote cancer cell growth. If further research

confirms these findings, it may help explain why the green

tea drinkers in the USC study were at lower risk of breast

cancer, regardless of other health, diet, and family history

factors.

 

-----------------------------

Benefits on benefits

-----------------------------

 

This USC study reminded me that drinking tea - either green

or black tea - may also give your immune system a boost.

 

In several recent e-Alerts I've addressed the yearly autumn

obsession with the topic of flu shots. You may or may not

experience protective benefits from a flu vaccine, but

without question you will improve your ability to fight the

flu if you take steps now to strengthen your immune system.

 

In the e-Alert " Model T " (5/22/03) I told you how researchers

at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hospital

had demonstrated that the amino acid L-theanine (found in

both green and black tea) may prompt the liver to secrete

interferon - an important compound that helps the body fight

an assortment of infections: viral, parasitic, fungal, and

bacteria.

 

Using a group of 21 subjects, researchers took blood samples

from all, then had 10 of them drink five cups of coffee each

day for four weeks, while 11 drank five cups of black tea

each day for the same period. At the end of the test period

more blood was drawn from each subject. All of the blood

samples were then exposed to E-coli bacteria. In response to

the bacteria, the blood cells from the tea drinkers secreted

five times the amount of interferon as blood samples taken

from the same subjects before the test period. The amount of

interferon secreted by the blood samples of the coffee

drinkers was the same, both before and after the test.

 

The Harvard researchers believe that their study offers a

reliable indication that a daily intake of five cups of tea

can significantly help the immune system fight infection.

 

And as an added bonus, Japanese research has shown that L-

theanine may also relieve stress. Approximately 30 minutes

after it's ingested, L-theanine stimulates production of

alpha waves, which can create a feeling of being

simultaneously alert and relaxed. L-theanine also stimulates

production of gamma aminobutryic acid (GABA), a

neurotransmitter that's been shown to limit nerve cell

activity in those areas of the brain associated with anxiety.

 

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Drink up

-----------------------------

 

Whether you're avoiding breast cancer, trying to reduce

stress, or looking for ways to boost your immune response,

the evidence is mounting - almost daily - that the

consumption of green tea delivers a host of bioactive

elements that enhance your well being in large ways and small.

 

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To start receiving your own copy of the HSI e-Alert, visit:

http://www.hsibaltimore.com/ealert/freecopy.html

Or forward this e-mail to a friend so they can sign-up to

receive their own copy of the HSI e-Alert.

 

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... and another thing

 

Here's why our grandparents didn't need fish oil supplements.

 

In an article about essential fatty acids in the Washington

Post, William Lands, a retired biochemist with the National

Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) speculates

on how the foods we eat have been altered over the course of

a century.

 

Today, most of the animals used for commercial meat are force

fed grains, reducing the omega-3 content in the meat. But in

the early 1900s, most of the chicken, pork, and beef that

people consumed came from free-range animals. Consequently,

the meat from those animals was rich in omega-3 fatty acids.

 

In that simpler time, the average American consumed only a

very small amount of soybean oil. But by the end of the

century, soybean oil (which has a high omega-6 content) had

become an inescapable ingredient in a wide variety of

processed foods. According to the U.S. Department of

Agriculture, about 20 percent of the average American's total

calories comes from soybean oil.

 

Yearly per capita consumption of soybean oil is now around 25

pounds per person. One hundred years ago it was only a small

fraction of a single pound per year. Lands says that this

increase represents a 1,000-fold jump in omega-6 fatty acid

consumption. Which is the primary reason why the ideal omega-

6/omega-3 ratio of 1:1 is so hard to achieve.

 

This dietary revolution may have actually changed the

composition of our bodies and brains, according to Joseph R.

Hibbeln, chief of the outpatient clinic at the Laboratory of

Membrane Biochemistry and Biophysics at the NIAAA. And he

wonders to what extent this change may be responsible for the

overall behavior of our society.

 

In 1998 Hibbeln published a paper in The Lancet in which he

examined worldwide fish consumption measured against reports

of depression worldwide. He found that populations that

consumed the most fish had the lowest depression rates, while

populations that ate the least amount of fish had the highest

rates of depression. And when he examined homicide and

suicide rates against fish consumption, the same pattern

emerged.

 

Of course, it would be overly simplistic to blame depression

and the wrongs of our society on low fish intake. But

Hibbeln's study certainly makes a good case for including

fish oil along with your daily supplements.

 

To Your Good Health,

 

Jenny Thompson

Health Sciences Institute

 

**************************************************************

 

Sources:

" Green tea and risk of breast cancer in Asian Americans "

International Journal of Cancer, Vol. 106, No. 4, 574-579,

9/10/03, interscience.wiley.com

" Another Green that Might Prevent Breast Cancer " Janet

Raloff, Science News, Vol. 164, No. 11, 9/13/03,

sciencenews.org

" A Cup of Tea May Be Germs' New Enemy - Study Finds Tea

Sharpens Body's Defense Against Infection " Associated Press,

4/22/03, edition.cnn.com

" Tea is Good for You " Health 24, 5/15/03, health24.co.za

" The Omega Principle " Sally Squires, Washington Post,

8/19/03, washingtonpost.com

 

Copyright ©1997-2003 by www.hsibaltimore.com, L.L.C.

The e-Alert may not be posted on commercial sites without

written permission.

 

**************************************************************

Before you hit reply to send us a question or request, please

visit here http://www.hsibaltimore.com/ealert/questions.html

 

**************************************************************

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