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Green
tea lowers the blood sugar level
9/2002
About
60 year ago, Dr.Minowada of Kyoto University noticed that sugar
in the urine of patients hospitalized for diabetes fell markedly
during periods when they participated in chanoyu (Tea
Ceremony). He reported that powdered tea of the type used in the
traditional Tea Ceremony had the capability of lowering blood
sugar. Unfortunately, however, this important report was ignored
due to the outbreak of World War 11 and the subsequent postwar
food shortages. But the arrival of the "gourmet era"
in recent years in Japan has led to heightened interest in
diabetes and the ability of green tea to reduce blood sugar.
The
sugars and carbohydrate in our food are digested mainly in the
duodenum, converted there to glucose and then absorbed into the
blood The agent that regulates the intake of blood sugar into
the tissues is insulin a chemical secreted from Langerhans
islets on the pancreas. Diabetes is a disease characterized by
insufficient secretion or improper functioning of insulin, which
hinders the proper absorption of glucose into the tissues and
leads to a high concentration of blood sugar that must
eventually be excreted into the urine. If this high
concentration of blood sugar should continue for a long period,
it will affect the vascular system and cause a number of quite
serious diseases including atherosclerosis and retinal
hemorrhages. Dr.Hara gave dried green tea catechin in edible
form to mice that were subject to hereditary diabetes and
verified a lowering of their blood sugar. In parallel
experiments, Dr.Shimizu gave an extract of green tea to mice and
demonstrated that it had the ability to lower blood sugar (Table
4). It has also been shown that the polysaccharides in green tea
possess the same ability. Although these results come from
animal tests, the evidence that green tea catechin and
polysaccharides can lower blood sugar in mice may also, in light
of Dr.Minowada’s old report, apply to humans.
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