Green
Tea on the Brain
If you haven't traded in your morning latte for a grande green tea,
you're missing the boat to good health. It's no secret that green tea bolsters
the body in many ways. But did you also know the same components of green tea
also boost the brain? Take polyphenols, for instance. These phytochemicals,
which give green tea its bitter taste, are powerful antioxidants that have been
associated with preventing cancer and heart attacks. Recent research has also
shown they may help maintain positive mood states and protect against Parkinson's
disease and other brain disorders. A
study from the University of San Francisco found that the polyphenols in green
tea can boost availability of the important brain substance dopamine in the areas
where it's needed. Dopamine is
a signaling substance in brain circuits that are crucial to creating positive
mood states. It is involved in transmitting signals of reward and motivation
and in helping muscles move smoothly. Dopamine production goes awry in the brains
of Parkinson's patients, leading to the muscle rigidity and tremors associated
with the disorder. Researchers in the study measured levels of dopamine
in mice before treating some of them with polyphenols. They then injured the specific
neurons linked to Parkinson's disease in all of the mice and measured dopamine
levels again. The mice treated with polyphenols appeared to have been protected
against toxic elements that may be linked to this disease. Other studies
in animals show that the polyphenols in green tea also help the brain and body
maintain a steady supply of their chief fuel, glucose. Polyphenols influence glucose
metabolism in part by helping the body regulate sensitivity to the hormone insulin.
Compounds in green tea enhance insulin sensitivity, keeping the brain running
smoothly on steady levels of glucose. Tannins are another important
set of compounds found in green tea. They too have also been shown to have brain
boosting benefits: they may prevent the brain damage that occurs after strokes
and other brain injuries. Tannins, like many other beneficial substances
in plants, are natural compounds produced by tea leaves in the wild to keep animals
from devouring the growing plants. It now turns out that one of the tannins found
in tea leaves, gallotannin, helps the body's own DNA repair system and keeps it
working in the brain despite damage that occurs during stroke. Under
normal conditions, the DNA repair system in the brain goes into overdrive in the
aftermath of stroke, and instead of helping to repair brain cells it causes them
to die. But researchers at the University of California
at San Francisco found that if they surround injured neurons with the gallotannin
found in green tea, it is highly effective in preventing neuron death.
This doesn't necessarily mean that consuming large amounts of green tea would
be sufficient to repair brain damage in stroke victims. The amount of gallotannins
found in green tea is negligible compared to the large amount used in the study.
But researchers hope to harness and synthesize the substance found in
green tea and use it to help stroke victims. In the meantime, consuming green
tea can help keep your body and brain working at its steady best. June
10, 2003 Taken from Psychology Today www.psychologytoday.com Emphasis by Sei Mee
Tea. "Chemicals in a Japanese
flower and green tea leaves prevent brain cell death" -- Dr. Raymond
Swanson, UCSF
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