Green tea shown to prolong life   (Reuters)  Updated: 2006-09-13 07:38  
A study of more than 40,000 men and women in Japan has found that those who 
drink a lot of green tea live longer, researchers said on Tuesday. 
 The investigation by Dr. Shinichi Kuriyama and colleagues at the Tohoku 
University School of Public Policy, Sendai, Japan, found the beverage was 
particularly effective in fighting heart disease but did not reduce the death 
rate due to cancer, as some earlier animal studies had suggested. 
 Polyphenols -- plant compounds known to be antioxidants -- found in green tea 
may explain the life prolonging benefit it confers, said the study published in 
this week's Journal of the American Medical Association. 
 The 11-year study was conducted in northeastern Japan, a region where 80 
percent of the population drinks green tea and more than half drink three or 
more cups daily. 
 Those involved in the study ranged in age from 40 to 79 and had no history of 
stroke, heart disease or cancer when the study began in 1994. 
 Those who drank five or more cups of green tea a day had a death rate overall 
and from heart disease in particular that was 16 percent lower than those who 
drank less than one cup daily, over the course of 11 years. 
 Over the first seven years of the study the death rate of the heavy tea 
drinkers was 26 percent lower. 
 Where heart disease was concerned the effect was stronger among women than 
men in the study, perhaps because men were more likely to be cigarette smokers, 
the authors reported. 
 Tea of all kinds is the most consumed beverage in the world aside from water, 
while heart disease and cancer are the two leading causes of death worldwide. 
 The authors said the apparent protective effect found was not likely to be 
the result of tea drinkers in the study somehow being more health conscious, 
since almost all Japanese consume green tea as one of their favorite beverages 
regardless of their other health habits.   
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