Pu'er may help diabetics: Research

One of the intentionally aged teas, Pu-Erh has a loyal following.


Nov 24th, '10, 20:09
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Pu'er may help diabetics: Research

by auhckw » Nov 24th, '10, 20:09

Pu'er may help diabetics: Research
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/i ... 608763.htm

2010-11-16 10:12:49

BEIJING, Nov. 16 (Xinhuanet) -- It’s well known that dark, mellow Pu'er tea reduces blood fat, lowers cholesterol, aids in weight loss and assists digestion.

Research shows that regularly drinking Pu'er, made from broad leaf tea in southwest China, has additional health benefits.

Experts at the recent China Pu'er Tea Festival in Shanghai reported that to some extent, Pu'er can work as secondary therapy for certain disease conditions caused by diabetes.

It also indicates that Pu'er may help prevent certain cancers and diseases of aging, thus helping to prolong life.

To find out more about Pu'er's effectiveness, research was carried out in Pu'er city in Yunnan Province, where virtually all China's Pu'er tea is grown.

Professor Sheng Jun, vice president of Yunnan Agriculture University, said at the festival in Shanghai that for one year 520 patients drank 1g "instant" Pu'er with 200ml water three times a day, half an hour before meals.

Results showed drinking the tea helped relieve symptoms of more than 70 percent of patients with dyslipidemia, an abnormal amount of lipids (cholesterol and/or fat) in the blood, which usually leads to diabetes.

As for patients with a positive albuminuria index, about 40 percent of them showed a negative index after drinking Pu'er tea for one year. Almost all of the patients with high blood fat and cholesterol had reduced symptoms.

Surprisingly, according to Sheng, the patients showed increased high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (good cholesterol) and decreased low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (bad cholesterol) at the end of the research. And the changes started to occur after three months of drinking.

"Most of the drugs we use to lower cholesterol today decrease both good and bad cholesterol at the same time," says Sheng. "It is quite interesting to find that Pu'er can work in the ideal way of increasing the good while decreasing the bad."

He says Pu'er tea also effectively reduces some complications of diabetes, citing a recent experiment in mice by Professor Zhang Wensheng at the Resource Institute of Beijing Normal University.

His research found that Pu'er helped diabetic mice lose weight and prevent damage to kidneys and brain function (learning and memory), both common side effects of diabetes.

But Zhang reported that blood sugar is only found decreased in blood sugar two hours after dinner, while remaining the same in blood sugar on an empty stomach. Thus, drinking it after a meal appeared more effective than drinking on an empty stomach.

Green tea is widely known as an antioxidant that helps prevent cancer. Pu'er tea has also been shown to possibly help prevent lung cancer and prolong the lives of lung cancer patients, according to Professor Luo Ying of the College of Life Science and Technology at the Kunming University of Science and Technology. She released results of her latest mouse experiment at an experts forum at the tea festival.

Genetic mutation of P53 gene is widely accepted as a major trigger of lung cancer caused by smoking and passive smoking. Pu'er was found to restrict the genetic mutation and induce apoptosis (disintegration or cell death) of the cancer cells but do no harm to normal cells, according to Luo's experiment on both cells in mice that drank Pu'er tea.

"Of course, quitting smoking is the most effective way to prevent cancer, yet most people cannot manage it," said Luo. "Drinking Pu'er tea may be a good intervention."

Regular daily drinking of Pu'er was is enough to prevent genetic mutation in the mice, while the amount needed for cancer patients is not known, Luo said.

Research is expected to continue and focus on other cancers as well.

Sheng, from the Yunnan Agriculture University, advises drinking 3g instant Pu'er powder in warm water daily, three times a day, half an hour before meals.

As for tea bricks and loose tea, he says 5g tea leaves could be cooked in 300ml water for five minutes each time.

Fermented tea is better than raw tea as it is milder on the stomach lining.

Like wine, Pu'er tea smells better over time. It is most beneficial with long-time storage for fermenting, at least 10 years, says Sheng. Modern technology can also ferment good tea in a far shorter time.

Since Shanghai is damp, tea bricks should be stored in an airy place; it is placed in a box, the cover should be open. It should not be stored in the refrigerator.

Since Pu'er tea is considered "warm" (yang energy) in traditional Chinese medicine, some people may suffer excessive internal "heat" with symptoms such as thirst and dry lips. Drinking more water helps relieve symptoms.

A very few people, about 1-2 percent, may get headaches after drinking Pu'er, but symptoms usually disappear after a week of drinking, according to Sheng.

(Source: Shanghai Daily)

Nov 24th, '10, 20:11
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Re: Pu'er may help diabetics: Research

by auhckw » Nov 24th, '10, 20:11

Sheng, from the Yunnan Agriculture University, advises drinking 3g instant Pu'er powder in warm water daily, three times a day, half an hour before meals.
Instant Pu'er powder??? Never seen before... :shock:
As for tea bricks and loose tea, he says 5g tea leaves could be cooked in 300ml water for five minutes each time.
5g:300ml @ Cook for 5 minute each time??? :|

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Nov 24th, '10, 22:56
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Re: Pu'er may help diabetics: Research

by entropyembrace » Nov 24th, '10, 22:56

auhckw wrote:
Sheng, from the Yunnan Agriculture University, advises drinking 3g instant Pu'er powder in warm water daily, three times a day, half an hour before meals.
Instant Pu'er powder??? Never seen before... :shock:
As for tea bricks and loose tea, he says 5g tea leaves could be cooked in 300ml water for five minutes each time.
5g:300ml @ Cook for 5 minute each time??? :|
need to add some yak butter and rock salt :lol:

Nov 26th, '10, 03:56
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Re: Pu'er may help diabetics: Research

by nicolas » Nov 26th, '10, 03:56

BEIJING, Nov. 16 (Xinhuanet) --
Since Pu'er tea is considered "warm" (yang energy) in traditional Chinese medicine, some people may suffer excessive internal "heat" with symptoms such as thirst and dry lips. Drinking more water helps relieve symptoms.
(Source: Shanghai Daily)

This is incorrect - sheng puerh is considered cold (yin energy), the younger the sheng, the colder it is. That is why excessive consumption of young sheng is not advised, regardless of whether it's old growth or plantation. Of course, it's against the tea industry's interests to warn newcomers to puerh tea.

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Nov 26th, '10, 05:49
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Re: Pu'er may help diabetics: Research

by skilfautdire » Nov 26th, '10, 05:49

Interesting. So there is a possibility of a sheng puerh to lend on the yang side with age then ? Do you have any number of years as example (although it surely would rely on other parameters than only age) ?

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Nov 26th, '10, 06:01
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Re: Pu'er may help diabetics: Research

by solitude » Nov 26th, '10, 06:01

pu erh is certainly healthy but I feel a strong marketing behind this research.

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Nov 26th, '10, 13:47
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Re: Pu'er may help diabetics: Research

by gingkoseto » Nov 26th, '10, 13:47

nicolas wrote:
BEIJING, Nov. 16 (Xinhuanet) --
Since Pu'er tea is considered "warm" (yang energy) in traditional Chinese medicine, some people may suffer excessive internal "heat" with symptoms such as thirst and dry lips. Drinking more water helps relieve symptoms.
(Source: Shanghai Daily)

This is incorrect - sheng puerh is considered cold (yin energy), the younger the sheng, the colder it is. That is why excessive consumption of young sheng is not advised, regardless of whether it's old growth or plantation. Of course, it's against the tea industry's interests to warn newcomers to puerh tea.
Agreed!
It's always a bad thing to simplify the yin and yang theory. It's even worse to make it completely upside down and deadly wrong. It's the worst when all these are used as commercial brain washing.

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Nov 26th, '10, 14:02
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Re: Pu'er may help diabetics: Research

by gingkoseto » Nov 26th, '10, 14:02

The research on shu puerh started 10 or 20 years ago. As I remember, at the bery beginning, it was made very clear that the found cholesterol reduction effects etc. is about shu puerh (or aged sheng puerh) and Hei Cha only. It also caused debates on whether sheng should be called puerh at all (some scholars thought people could be misled by thinking sheng could have similar characters and health benefits as shu). I personally don't agree with their definition on puerh, but at least these people made a clear and very true point that sheng and shu don't have similar health effects.

But nowadays some large manufactures want people to think every puerh product is healthy for everybody at any time point, similar to some green tea health effect claims and claims on many other food stuff.

We should keep it in mind that potatoes can potentially reduce cholesterol too. Potatoes have high dose of antioxidants, vitamins and minerals too. The only major difference is potatoes are cheap so potato industry doesn't invest as much on clinical studies. :mrgreen:

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