Plenty of
studies have suggested that
tea is a boon for cardiovascular
health, but new research
has found that adding milk
to your favorite brew negates
those benefits.
The culprits in milk is a
group of proteins called caseins
that interact with tea, decreasing
the concentration of catechin
-- the flavonoids in tea that
are responsible for its protective
effects against heart disease,
according to the study authors.
"There are a lot of studies
that show that tea is protective
against cardiac diseases,"
said lead researcher Dr.
Verena Stangl, professor
of cardiology at the Charite
Hospital, Universitatsmedizin-Berlin,
in Germany. "If you look
at the studies, you see
that in Asia there are less
cardiac diseases, but in
England that's not the case.
So the question is, is the
addition of milk a reason
for this difference between
Asia and England, where
tea is often taken with
milk?" she said.
In the study, 16 healthy
postmenopausal women drank
either half a liter of freshly
brewed black tea, black
tea with 10 percent skimmed
milk, or boiled water on
three different occasions
under similar conditions.
The researchers then measured
the function of the cells
lining the brachial artery
in the forearm, using high
resolution ultrasound before
and two hours after tea
consumption.
Stangl's team found that
black tea significantly
improved the ability of
the arteries to relax and
expand. "But when we added
milk, we found the biological
effect of tea was completely
abolished," she said.
Additional experiments
on rat aortas and rat endothelial
cells -- which line blood
vessels -- found that tea
relaxed the vessels. But
adding milk blunted the
effect.
"If you want to drink tea
for its health effects,
don't drink it with milk,"
Stangl said.
The study findings are
published in the Jan. 9
online edition of the European
Heart Journal.
Stangl noted that not only
does milk block tea's benefits
for blood vessels, it also
destroys the antioxidant
effects of tea and perhaps
its cancer-protective effects
as well.
She said her team is also
comparing the effects of
green and black tea on the
function of blood vessels.
"It's a question whether
green tea, with its higher
catechin content, is better
than black tea in regard
to endothelial function,"
she said.
One expert agreed that
you should hold the milk
when drinking tea.
"This is actually something
we tell patients to do --
not to have milk in tea,"
said Dr. Robert Vogel, a
professor of medicine at
the University of Maryland
Medical School.
Tea is one of the greatest
sources of antioxidants,
Vogel said. "In countries
where they drink a lot of
tea, heart disease is decreased,
except for the British Isles.
It is typical in Great Britain
to add milk."
Vogel's advice is simple.
"Add lemon not milk. You
should not add milk or cream
to tea -- it's a very good
drink, but not with milk,"
he said.