Magic
Brew for Your Heart
Excerpt
By Kathleen Doheny, HealthScoutNews
(HealthScoutNews) -- Yet another study has found drinking tea
is good for your heart, particularly in reducing death from heart
attacks.
Getting the credit, once again, are tea's flavonoids -- antioxidants
that help prevent blood vessel damage.
In this latest study, conducted in the Netherlands, heavy tea
drinkers who indulged in more than three cups of black tea a day
had about half the risk of a heart attack of those who didn't
sip the stuff. And when the heavy tea drinkers did have a heart
attack, they had less than a third the risk of dying from it,
compared to those who didn't drink tea.
For the study, published in the May issue of the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition, researchers evaluated 4,807
men and women participating in the Rotterdam Study, an ongoing
evaluation of Dutch residents over age 55.
"The strongest association was with tea and prevention
of cardiac death, not tea and prevention of heart attacks,"
says Lenore J. Launer, an investigator at the National Institute
on Aging who worked with the Netherlands research team. During
the follow-up period of 5.5 years, on average, there were 146
reported heart attacks, and 30 were fatal.
The tea's flavonoids, which are substances that act as antioxidants
to undo cell damage, are thought to help preserve cardiovascular
health by preventing excess blood vessel damage, even in those
with heart disease.
Based on this study, Launer wouldn't recommend people change
their tea-drinking habits.
"It's another study that reinforces the idea that diet
can contribute to heart disease," she says. She hopes the
study will encourage people to evaluate their diet, along with
other lifestyle issues, such as lack of exercise, to reduce their
risk of heart attack.
Another expert also stops short of recommending any change in
tea-drinking habits based on this latest research.
"This study seems to me very preliminary," says Dr.
Zi-Jian Xu, an attending cardiologist at Santa Monica-UCLA Medical
Center.
Based on the study, he would not recommend people who don't
drink tea -- healthy hearts or not -- start drinking just to reduce
heart attack risk. Nor would he advise those who already drink
tea and are having no ill effects to give it up. More studies
need to be done, he adds.
Since the early 90s, several studies have focused on tea drinking
and heart health, Launer says, and the conclusions have sometimes
been contradictory.
Initial studies finding benefits from a food or vitamin are
sometimes followed by studies that show no benefit or even adverse
effects, Xu adds.
And, he notes, there were initial studies that found vitamin
E supplements were good for the heart, but subsequent studies
found no benefit or even adverse effects.
Teas that contain caffeine can also lead to problems for some
people, he adds, sometimes causing palpitations or abnormal rhythms.
What To Do: For a daily nutrition tip to boost heart
health or overall health, see the American
Dietetic Association. For more information on heart health,
see the American
Heart Association.
Reference
Source 101
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