Green tea controls high blood pressure
Green tea controls high blood pressure High blood pressure places a serious
burden on the vascular system and contributes to atherosclerosis. Atherosclerosis
will in turn precipitate heart disease, stroke and other cardiovascular diseases.
The cause of high blood pressure is not yet fully understood, but it is clear
that a chemical called angiotensin II plays a role in high blood pressure due
to essential hypertension and to arterial stenosis of the kidneys. Blood contains
the substance angiotensinogen which is transformed to angiotensin I unde action
of the enzyme renin in the kidneys. Another enzyme called th "Angiotensin
Converting Enzymen (ACE) then changes angiotensin I t angiotensin II, which
is an extremely strong vascular constrictor. It is th onstriction of the blood
vessels caused by this constrictor that leads to high blood pressure. Dr. Hara(#9)
has shown that green tea catechin impedes the action of ACE and suppresses production
of angiotensin II. He has also demonstrated that administration of catechin
to Spontaneously Hypertensive Rat (SHR) could limit increases in the rats' blood
pressure. SHR are rats used as models for human high blood pressure experiments,
and their blood pressure at the start of the experiment (when they were five
weeks old) was 130 140mmHg. By the age of about 10 weeks, after a diet of normal
feed, their blood pressure had risen to more than 200mmHg. But the blood pressure
those rats raised with U.5Y5 catechin added to their teed remained belo of those
rats raised with 0.5% catechin added to their feed remained below 2OOmmHg. Exchanging
the feed of the two rat groups at 16 weeks of age led to a reversal in blood
pressure between the two groups . These results indicate that green tea catechin
has the ability to prevent a rise in blood pressure. If the amount of catechin
used in this experiment is converted to the amount of green tea normally drunk
by humans, it is equivalent to drinking about 10 moderately large cups of tea
per day. These are surely quite significant results in suggesting, as they do.
that the daily consumption of green tea can prevent high blood pressure.
(#9) Y. Hara, T. Matsuzaki and T. Suzuki, Nippon Nogeikagaku Kaishi, 61,803(1987).
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(Cited from: China tea on line)