Thursday, May 27, 2010

A Repost From NaturalNews

Green tea blocks lung cancer

Thursday, May 27, 2010 by: David Gutierrez, staff writer
Ads by Google
Live & Study in Australia
Study Accredited Courses at AIAS
& Start a New Career. Free Guide.
www.AIAS.com.au
Green Tea Extract
Novanat, leading manufacturer
of green tea extracts in China
www.novanat.com
Blooming Tea from China
New style blooming tea
Good Taste
www.cnyfny.cn
Share/Save/Bookmark Email this article to a friend Printable Version FREE Email Newsletter

Articles Related to This Article:

The inside scoop: Natural Health Products Expo West industry event

NaturalNews emerges as top truly independent natural health news site

NaturalNews readers making waves across the natural health, natural living markets (opinion)



NaturalNews Store Specials:

Raw organic Vanilla powder at 40% off

Revolutionary new Hurom Slow Juicer at the lowest price on the 'net + FREE shipping!

Certified Organic Nutiva Hemp Seeds at a huge discount (+ FREE bottle of hemp oil)

See more at the NN store...

(NaturalNews) Drinking at least a cup of green tea a day may significantly decrease a person's risk of lung cancer, according to a study conducted by researchers from Shan Medical University in Taiwan.

Cancer rates are significantly lower in Asia than in other parts of the world, and high consumption of green tea has been suggested as one of the potential explanations. Laboratory studies have suggested that the polyphenols in green tea can halt the growth of cancer cells, but the results of human studies have been mixed.

In the current study, researchers analyzed green tea consumption, smoking, genetic factors and lung cancer risk in more than 500 people. They found that among non-smokers, those who did not drink tea had five times the lung cancer risk of those who drank at least one cup per day. Among smokers, not drinking green tea was linked to 12 times the cancer risk of those who drank at least one cup per day.

A genetic analysis of all the study participants revealed that a specific variant of the gene known as IGF1 was associated with the correlation between higher tea consumption and lower cancer risk. Among those without this variant, green tea consumption had little effect on cancer risk. This could explain the inconsistent results of prior studies.

Health experts warned that whatever the benefits of green tea might be, they do not outweigh the danger posed by smoking.

"Smoking tobacco fills your lungs with around 80 cancer-causing chemicals," said Yinka Ebo of Cancer Research U.K. "Drinking green tea is not going to compensate for that. Unfortunately, it's not possible to make up for the harm caused by smoking by doing other things right like eating a healthy, balanced diet. The best thing a smoker can do to reduce their risk of lung cancer, and more than a dozen other cancer types, is to quit."

Sources for this story include: news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/8453628.stm.



Share33



Buzz up!

No comments:


Our Guardian Angel Ministers To Our Needs

God's Divine Providence

Followers