You Are Visitor Number
,,  

   Your One Daily Source
    for Earth Change News

ECTV Home Breaking News ECTV MallNews ArchiveSearch
       Message BoardECTV AudioTV GuestsReceive Breaking News Newsletter
click here for more info on advertising
Translate this page automatically.
For Printer Friendly Version of This Article Click Here
 Make payments with PayPal - it's fast, free and secure!

Breaking News
Breaking News
Biology News
Science & Spirit
Earth Astrology
Prophecy
UFO News

Breaking News
Audio Archives
Guest Schedule
Newsletter
Pic of the Week
Live Events
News Archive  
 
 Live Cams
Headlines News
 Message Board

Breaking News
  Mitch Battros
  Webmaster

 Our TV Channels
 About ECTV
     Advertising
     Privacy Policy
     Site Map

15, 2000

Green Tea May Help Prevent Skin Cancer - U.S. Team


``Based on epidemiological and mouse models, we can say drinking four or five cups a day may be very helpful for protection,'' the report's author, Santosh Katiyar of Case Western Reserve University, said in a phone interview.

But he cautioned that green tea was a preventive step, not a cure, for skin cancer.

``It is a prevention. ... As long as I take it, I am protected,'' said Katiyar, who drinks two cups of green team a day.

The report appeared in the Archives of Dermatology, a journal published by the American Medical Association.

The leaf and bud of the camellia plant are the basis of both green and black tea. But unlike black tea, which is fermented, green tea is steamed dry immediately after harvesting, which leaves it with larger amounts of polyphenols.

Its most effective polyphenol is epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG), the report said.

Past studies of mice exposed to ultraviolet light have shown that feeding them green tea or applying EGCG to their skin protected them from the reddening, blistering and cell division associated with the early stages of skin cancer.

Recent experiments have shown that when applied to human skin that has been exposed to the sun, EGCG prevented both inflammation and the development of leukocytes, white blood cells that can be a marker for cancer, Katiyar said.

Many skin care manufacturers have used the mouse research to justify including green tea extracts in their skin care products, he said. But he challenged the effectiveness of skin care products incorporating green tea.

``It is unlikely that these skin care products have been tested in controlled clinical trials, and the concentration of (polyphenolic compounds) in these preparations is not uniform,'' he said. He urged further clinical testing and trials.

 

Click Here!


copyright -2000 Earth Changes TV P.O. Box 31286 Seattle, Wa 98103

Send e-mail to: earthchanges@earthlink.net or fax to: (206) 547-5136

Ths website is designed and maintained in cooperation with In The Moment Computing.
www.ITMComputing.com