Dec. 18 - Neuroprotection From Green Tea For Parkinson's Disease
Does the consumption of green tea, widely touted
to have beneficial effects on health, also protect brain cells?
Authors of a new study being published in the December 15th
issue of Biological Psychiatry share
new data that indicates this may be the case. The authors investigated
the effects of green tea polyphenols, a group of naturally occurring
chemical substances found in plants that have antioxidant properties,
in an animal model of Parkinson's disease.
Parkinson's disease is a progressive, degenerative
disorder of the central nervous system, resulting from the loss
of dopamine-producing brain cells, and there is presently no
cure. According to Dr. Baolu Zhao, corresponding and senior
author on this article, current treatments for Parkinson's are
associated with serious and important side effects. Their previous
research has indicated that green tea possesses neuroprotective
effects, leading Guo and colleagues to examine its effects specifically
in Parkinson's. The authors discovered that green tea polyphenols
protect dopamine neurons that increases with the amount consumed.
They also show that this protective effect is mediated by inhibition
of the ROS-NO pathway, a pathway that may contribute to cell
death in Parkinson's.
Considering the popularity of green tea beverages
worldwide, there is enormous public interest in the health effects
of its consumption. John H. Krystal, MD, Editor of
Biological Psychiatry and affiliated with both
Yale University School of Medicine and the VA Connecticut Healthcare
System, reminds us that "many health-related claims have
been made for a wide variety of naturally-occurring substances
and many of these claims, as in the case of St. John's Wort
and Ginko Biloba, have not held up in rigorous clinical studies.
Thus, it is extremely important to identify the putative neuroprotective
mechanisms in animal models, as Guo and colleagues have begun
to do for Parkinson's disease."
Dr. Zhao's hope is that eventually "green
tea polyphenols may be developed into a safe and easily administrable
drug for Parkinson's disease." Dr. Krystal agrees, that
"if green tea consumption can be shown to have meaningful
neuroprotective actions in patients, this would be an extremely
important advance."
Source: Biological Psychiatry
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