9th September, 2008: Green Tea May Provide Relief for Dry Mouth

For centuries, the health benefits of green tea have been widely speculated. Tea drinkers can agree on its delicious taste and because of that, have continued to drink it. Recently, though, studies have emerged linking green tea to the prevention of the autoimmune disease, Sjogren’s Syndrome.

Sjogren’s Syndrome, or dry mouth, is a relatively common disorder in which people do not produce enough saliva. According to research at the Medical College of Georgia, in an experiment with mice with the same condition, those treated with green tea extract produced much better results than other test groups.

Lead researcher, Dr. Stephen Hsu explains that “30 percent of elderly Americans suffer from degrees of dry mouth,” so there truly is a need to find some sort of remedy. One notable effect of the experiment was the short time it took for the healing benefits of green tea to work. Dr. Hsu said, “Those treated with the green tea extract beginning at three weeks, showed significantly less damage to those glands over time.”

So, tea drinkers, now in addition to all the tasty and relaxing effects of tea, it might actually be keeping you healthy. Maybe milk and green tea can unite in their cause to “do a body good” like in this green tea ice cream recipe!

Posted by Linda at 6:00 am |

2 Comments »

  1. Seems like I read about a new thing that green tea helps everyday!

    Comment by Stephen — September 11, 2008 @ 2:34 pm

  2. Green Tea is amazing!

    Comment by Acia — September 21, 2008 @ 8:09 pm

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

Thanks for commenting.