Natural Healing: Green Tea Extract for Weight Loss
By Evelyn Leigh
January/February 2002
In recent years, there’s been a deluge of news about the potential protective effects of green tea against cancer and heart disease. Research shows that most of green tea’s health benefits can be attributed to its high content of antioxidant compounds called polyphenols—more specifically known as catechins. A clinical study suggests that a green tea extract rich in catechins may actually help the body burn fat. Like black tea, which comes from the same plant (Camellia sinensis), green tea contains caffeine in addition to catechins. While there is some scientific evidence that caffeine itself can help burn fat, the results of this study suggest that the fat-burning effect of green tea was not due to its caffeine content alone.
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The small, randomized, double-blind study involved ten healthy young men with body-fat ratings that ranged from lean to mildly obese. On three separate occasions, the participants took one of three different treatments three times a day with meals: a green tea extract containing 50 mg of caffeine and 90 mg of epigallocatechin gallate (an important tea catechin), a 50 mg dose of caffeine, or an inactive placebo. The men continued to eat a “typical Western diet” that provided approximately 13 percent of daily calories from protein, 40 percent from fat and 47 percent from carbohydrates. During the treatment periods, each man spent twenty-four hours in a respiratory chamber that enabled researchers to monitor his total energy (calorie) expenditures as well as his respiratory quotients (a measurement of the rate of fat oxidation). Men taking the green tea extract had a small but statistically significant 4 percent increase in energy expenditure, compared with no change for those taking either the placebo or the caffeine alone. In addition, respiratory quotients dropped for those taking green tea, meaning that their fat oxidation was increased and their carbohydrate oxidation decreased.