Green Tea May Prevent Alzheimer's

Posted on November 20, 2015 by Beth Barbakoff

By Andrea Donsky, Founder and Editor-in-Chief of NaturallySavvy.com

Even in the warmest weather, a cup of tea is most always a welcome and healthy beverage choice, especially when it's green tea, the semi-fermented member of the camellia sinensis plant (black tea is the fully fermented version).

The scientific community (and scores of educated green tea drinkers) already knows that green tea offers us many healthy benefits. According to the website WebMD, research into green tea over the last decade has proven it has an ability to be a weapon in the fights against cancer and heart disease as well as an ability to help lower cholesterol and decrease the risk of stroke. It boosts immune function, can help to maintain a healthy weight and also has applications for the skin—contributing to younger, more elastic skin. And now, new research links green tea consumption with a decreased risk of Alzheimer's and dementia.

According to the study, published in the rent issue of journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, green tea may help block the formation of bets-amyloid plaques, which have been connected with the deadly disease.

A compound in green tea called EGCG (epigallocatechin-2-gallate)–already known as a powerful antioxidant–showed the ability to prevent the plague formations as well as an ability to break down existing potentially harmful plague structures.

NutraIngredients.com reports that this research project was to use a multidisciplinary approach to studying green tea's effect on Alzheimer's. "This is the first example of structure-centric, multidisciplinary investigations by three investigators with three different areas of expertise," explained lead researchers Dr. Mi Hee Lim from the University of Michigan.

According to the Alzheimer's Association, more than 5 million Americans are currently battling the disease and one out of every eight senior citizens is affected. It's the sixth leading cause of death in the country and the only cause of death in the nation's top ten leading causes of death that has no known prevention or cure.

 


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