Broadcast: April 30,
2003
By Nancy Steinbach
This is the VOA Special English Health
Report.
American researchers say drinking
tea may help strengthen the body’s
defense system against infection.
Doctors at Brigham and Women’s Hospital
in Boston, Massachusetts, did the
study.
The team studied a chemical found
in black, green, oolong1 and pekoe2
tea. This chemical is an amino acid
called L-theanine. The scientists
say it may increase the strength of
gamma delta T cells. That's the letter
T, not the drink. Gamma delta T cells
are part of the body’s defenses.
First, the researchers mixed some
of these cells with antigens found
in the amino acid. Antigens help the
body react to infection. Then the
scientists added some bacteria. Within
twenty-four hours, the cells produced
a lot of interferon, a substance that
fights infection. Cells not mixed
with the antigens did not produce
interferon.
In the second part of the study, eleven
people drank five to six cups of black
tea every day. Ten other people drank
the same amount of instant coffee.
That is dried coffee mixed with hot
water.
Two weeks later, and again two weeks
after that, the researchers tested
the blood of all twenty-one people.
They also looked at what happened
when they added bacteria to the blood
cells. They found that the tea drinkers
produced five times more interferon
after they started drinking tea. The
coffee drinkers did not produce interferon.
The findings appear in the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences.
The National Institutes of Health
and the Arthritis Foundation provided
money for the research.
Doctor Jack Bukowski led the study.
He says the antigens added to the
gamma delta T cells were responsible
for the increased reaction to the
bacteria. He says the study also showed
that the cells were able to remember
the bacteria and fight them again
the next time.
Earlier research already has found
that tea can help prevent heart disease
and cancer. Doctor Bukowski says the
new study must be repeated with more
people. If the findings are confirmed,
he says, then tea drinking might also
help protect against bacterial infections.
He says the amino acid L-theanine
could be removed from tea and used
as a drug to strengthen the body's
defenses.
This VOA Special English Health Report
was written by Nancy Steinbach.
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