Objectives Flavonoids may protect against cardiovascular disease. Tea is a major source of dietary flavonoids. Studies indicate black tea improves endothelial function but data on arterial haemodynamics, blood pressure (BP) and insulin resistance are equivocal. Inconsistency may be due to flaws in study design or flavonoid doses tested. Further, no study has evaluated the dose–response curve. Our study aimed to test the effects of various doses of black tea on vascular function, BP and insulin resistance. Methods According to a randomized, double-blind, controlled, cross-over design, 19 healthy men were assigned to receive either five treatments with a twice daily intake of black tea (0, 100, 200, 400 and 800mg tea flvanoids/day) in five periods lasting 1 week each. Results Black tea dose dependently increased flowmediated dilation (FMD) from 7.8% (control) to 9.0, 9.1, 9.6 and 10.3% after the different flavonoid doses, respectively (PU0.0001). Already 100mg/day (less than 1 cup of tea) increased FMD compared with control (PU0.0113). FMD improvement after 800mg/day was significant compared with control (P<0.0001) but also to 100mg/day (PU0.0121) and 200mg/day (PU0.0275). Black tea intake decreased office systolic (S2.6mmHg, PU0.0007) and diastolic (S2.2mmHg, PU0.006) BP as well as stiffness index (PU0.0159) without changes in other parameters studied. Conclusion Our study is the first showing black tea ingestion dose dependently improved FMD and decreased peripheral arterial stiffness in healthy volunteers. Our data suggest that worldwide all tea drinkers could benefit from protective cardiovascular effects exerted by tea.

Black tea consumption dose-dependently improves flow-mediated dilation in healthy males

GRASSI D;DESIDERI, GIOVAMBATTISTA;FERRI, CLAUDIO
2009-01-01

Abstract

Objectives Flavonoids may protect against cardiovascular disease. Tea is a major source of dietary flavonoids. Studies indicate black tea improves endothelial function but data on arterial haemodynamics, blood pressure (BP) and insulin resistance are equivocal. Inconsistency may be due to flaws in study design or flavonoid doses tested. Further, no study has evaluated the dose–response curve. Our study aimed to test the effects of various doses of black tea on vascular function, BP and insulin resistance. Methods According to a randomized, double-blind, controlled, cross-over design, 19 healthy men were assigned to receive either five treatments with a twice daily intake of black tea (0, 100, 200, 400 and 800mg tea flvanoids/day) in five periods lasting 1 week each. Results Black tea dose dependently increased flowmediated dilation (FMD) from 7.8% (control) to 9.0, 9.1, 9.6 and 10.3% after the different flavonoid doses, respectively (PU0.0001). Already 100mg/day (less than 1 cup of tea) increased FMD compared with control (PU0.0113). FMD improvement after 800mg/day was significant compared with control (P<0.0001) but also to 100mg/day (PU0.0121) and 200mg/day (PU0.0275). Black tea intake decreased office systolic (S2.6mmHg, PU0.0007) and diastolic (S2.2mmHg, PU0.006) BP as well as stiffness index (PU0.0159) without changes in other parameters studied. Conclusion Our study is the first showing black tea ingestion dose dependently improved FMD and decreased peripheral arterial stiffness in healthy volunteers. Our data suggest that worldwide all tea drinkers could benefit from protective cardiovascular effects exerted by tea.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11697/19491
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