Tea in health and disease

Item

Title

Tea in health and disease

Creator

Dou, Q. Ping

Date

2019

pages

222

Publisher

MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

Description

Tea, made from the leaves of the Camellia senenisis plant, is the second most consumed beverage worldwide after water. Accumulating evidence from cellular, animal, epidemiological and clinical studies have linked tea consumption to various health benefits, such as chemoprevention of cancers, chronic inflammation, heart and liver diseases, diabetes, neurodegenerative diseases, etc. Although such health benefits have not been consistently observed in some intervention trials, positive results from clinical trials have provided direct evidence supporting the cancer-protective effect of green tea. In addition, numerous mechanisms of action have been suggested to contribute to tea’s disease-preventive effects. Furthermore, effects of the processing and storage of tea, as well as additives on tea’s properties have been investigated.

Subject

Science (General)
Biology
Nutrition and Food Sciences

Language

English

isbn

9783038979869 (print)
9783038979876 (online)

doi

Rights

uri

Item sets

Tea in health and disease