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Black Tea Really Does Help Alleviate Stress

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Article 05 Oct 2006 - 12:00pm (PDT)

 

If you drink black tea you will de-stress faster because your levels

of cortisol, a stress hormone, will go down more quickly, say

researchers from the University College London. This study applies

only to black tea.

 

You can read about this study in the journal Psychopharmacology.

 

The researchers observed 75 volunteers. They were all male, non-

smoking, regular tea drinkers. For a period of six weeks one group

was given 4 cups of black tea per day while the other was given a

placebo that tasted, looked and smelt the same. Both groups had to

refrain from drinking other teas, coffees and herbal and/or

caffeinated beverages during this period.

 

All the volunteers were exposed to stressful tasks while the

researchers monitored their cortisol levels, blood pressure, blood

platelet levels, and how they subjectively rated their levels of

stress.

 

The scientists found both groups experienced similar increases in

heart rate and blood pressure during the stress-inducing situations.

Levels of cortisol 50 minutes after each stressful task dropped 47%

among the black tea drinkers and just 27% among the placebo drinkers.

The black tea drinkers also had lower levels of blood platelet

activation. The black tea drinkers also expressed themselves in a

more relaxed way 50 minutes after a stressful task, when compared to

the placebo drinkers.

 

The scientists are unsure which black tea ingredients help people

recover from stress.

 

The team emphasized that black tea does not lower stress levels while

the stressful event is taking place. It helps you get over it more

quickly.

 

The effects of tea on psychophysiological stress responsivity and

post-stress recovery: a randomised double-blind trial

Andrew Steptoe, E. Leigh Gibson, Raisa Vounonvirta, Emily D.

Williams, Mark Hamer, Jane A. Rycroft, Jorge D. Erusalimsky and Jane

Wardle

Psychopharmacology DOI 10.1007/s00213-006-0573-2

Click here to see the abstract online

 

Written by: Christian Nordqvist

Editor: Medical News Today

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