Relax and Refresh

Herbal Heat Shoulder Wrap - On Sale  $21.99
mircowave shoulder wrap
 


Relax with Us
  • Relax Home
  • Quick Ship Items
  • Catalog
  • Testimonials
  • Pain Relief Blog
The Best Green Tea
  • Japanese Green Tea - Best Premium Green Teas
  • Green Tea Spa
  • Japanese Green Tea - Bagged
  • GenmaiCha
  • Japanese Green Tea - Hojicha Roasted
  • Green Tea Tablets
  • Tablet Ingredients
  • Premium Green Tea Sampler
  • Japanese Green Tea - Loose leaf from Shizuoksa
Green Tea Info
  • Tea Health Issues
  • Green Tea Background
  • Active Ingredients
  • Green Tea Chemical Properties
  • The Tea Museum
  • Japanese Green Tea Estate Grown in Shizuoka
  • Green Tea Processing
  • Technical Details of Tea Drying
  • Iced Japanese Green Tea Brewing
  • Iced Japanese Green Tea reciepe
  • Nakakawane Town
  • WHAT EXACTLY IS TEA
  • Japanese Green Tea Brewing
  • Green Tea Processing
  • Technical Details of Tea Drying
  • Iced Japanese Green Tea recipe
  • Japanese Green Tea Estate Grown in Shizuoka
  • Tea Sourcing Issues
  • Other Ingredients
  • Tea Terms
  • Brewing other teas
  • Green Tea w Ginger Benefits
Green Tea Research
  • Early findings on Green Tea Health Effects
  • Green tea vs Tabacco
  • Green Tea appears to counteract tobacco and dioxins effect
  • HIV and Green Tea Health Effects
  • Green tea reduces risk of prostate cancer
  • Green Tea Limitations and Your Postrate
  • Green Tea imapct on Liver Disease and transplants
  • Green tea health issues and polyphenols
  • skin cell rejuvenation
  • Green Tea Promise's to regenerate Skin Cells
Information Center
  • Arthritis
  • Aromatherapy
  • Back Pain
  • Fitness
  • Massage

Green Tea's Counteracts Tobacco and Dixon's Effects 

August 04, 2003

Green tea's ability to fight cancer is even more potent and varied than scientists suspected, say researchers who have discovered that chemicals in green tea shut down one of the key molecules that tobacco relies upon to cause cancer. It's a find that could help explain why people who drink green tea are less likely to develop cancer.

While green tea has been much-ballyhooed for its anti-cancer effects as well as other purported abilities such as preventing rheumatoid arthritis and lowering cholesterol, just how the substance works has been a mystery. Scientists do know that green tea contains chemicals that are anti-oxidants and quench harmful molecules. But its effects on the AH receptor have not been thoroughly evaluated until now.

"It's likely that the compounds in green tea act through many different pathways," says Gasiewicz, professor and chair of Environmental Medicine and director of Rochester's Environmental Health Science Center. "Green tea may work differently than we thought to exert its anti-cancer activity."

Gasiewicz and Palermo showed that the chemicals shut down the AH receptor in cancerous mouse cells, and early results indicate the same is true in human cells as well.

Graduate student Christine Palermo and adviser Thomas Gasiewicz, Ph.D., set out to measure the effects of the chemicals found in green tea on a molecule known as the aryl hydrocarbon (AH) receptor, a molecule that frequently plays a role in turning on genes that are oftentimes harmful. Gasiewicz has previously shown how both tobacco smoke and dioxin manipulate the molecule--a favorite target of toxic substances --to cause havoc within the body, and currently he's working with scientists at the James P. Wilmot Cancer Center to clarify exactly how substances like tobacco smoke cause cancer.

The team isolated the chemicals that make up green tea and found two that inhibit AH activity. The two substances, epigallocatechingallate (EGCG) and epigallocatechin (EGC), are close molecular cousins to other flavonoids found in broccoli, cabbage, grapes and red wine that are known to help prevent cancer.

In the laboratory the AH-inhibiting effects of green tea become evident when EGCG and EGC reach levels typical of those found in a cup of green tea. But the scientists say that how green tea is metabolized by the body is crucial to its effectiveness, and that results in the laboratory don't necessarily translate directly to the dinner table.

"Right now we don't know if drinking the amount of green tea that a person normally drinks would make a difference, but the work is giving us insight into how the proteins work," says Palermo, who enjoys cold green tea herself. "There are a lot of differences between various kinds of green tea, so a lot more research is needed."

Our Deluxe Sampler Package 2 each so you can share with a friend

Premium Green Tea Genmaicha Tea Hojicha Tea

 

 

The finding by scientists at the University of Rochester's Environmental Health Science Center appears in the July 21 issue of Chemical Research in Toxicology, published by the American Chemical Society.
University of Rochester Press Release,

Site map



Shopping Cart

View Checkout >>

Product Search

Product Search

Contact Us

1-800-589-1509
Call Us
9:00 am - 5:00 pm PST

Contact Us by Email

 

Newsletter Info

Name:
Email:
Thank you. Your email has been added.
Email Subscription to Newsletter

 

Visitors: Log in to your account

 

Request Newsletter


Policies

Frequent Buyer Program

 

Review our Shipping, Return, Privacy policies and more before buying

Wholesale purchasing Professional discount

Contributors

Article Submission

Off Site Resources

AFFILIATES

Affiliate Register/Login

Affiliate policies

Massagers, Herbal Heat Pillows, Back Braces, Orthopedic Supports  and More  Copy Right 2000-20008 Disclaimer.