| Literature DB >> 31109113 |
Daxiang Li1,2, Ruru Wang3,4, Jinbao Huang5,6, Qingshuang Cai7,8, Chung S Yang9,10, Xiaochun Wan11,12, Zhongwen Xie13,14.
Abstract
Cardiovascular diseases have overtaken cancers as the number one cause of death. Hypertension is the most dangerous factor linked to deaths caused by cardiovascular diseases. Many researchers have reported that tea has anti-hypertensive effects in animals and humans. The aim of this review is to update the information on the anti-hypertensive effects of tea in human interventions and animal studies, and to summarize the underlying mechanisms, based on ex-vivo tissue and cell culture data. During recent years, an increasing number of human population studies have confirmed the beneficial effects of tea on hypertension. However, the optimal dose has not yet been established owing to differences in the extent of hypertension, and complicated social and genetic backgrounds of populations. Therefore, further large-scale investigations with longer terms of observation and tighter controls are needed to define optimal doses in subjects with varying degrees of hypertensive risk factors, and to determine differences in beneficial effects amongst diverse populations. Moreover, data from laboratory studies have shown that tea and its secondary metabolites have important roles in relaxing smooth muscle contraction, enhancing endothelial nitric oxide synthase activity, reducing vascular inflammation, inhibiting rennin activity, and anti-vascular oxidative stress. However, the exact molecular mechanisms of these activities remain to be elucidated.Entities:
Keywords: endothelial function; hypertension; inflammation; tea secondary metabolites
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31109113 PMCID: PMC6567086 DOI: 10.3390/nu11051115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Blood pressure-lowering effects of tea in human interventions.
| No. | Methods of Study | Selected Participants | Tea or Dosage & Duration | Test Site | Primary Outcomes and Comments | Year (Citation) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Meta-analysis | 13 studies | Green tea | Australia | Significantly reduced SBP by 2.08 mmHg and DBP by 1.71 mmHg. Good methodology analysis and trusted results | 2014 [ |
| 2 | Meta-analysis | 13 randomized controlled trials across, 1367 subjects | Green tea polyphenols (<582.8 mg/day), ≥12 weeks | Several countries | Significantly reduced SBP level by 1.98 mmHg and DBP by 1.92 mmHg. Good methodology analysis, a large population and trusted results | 2014 [ |
| 3 | Meta-analysis | 11 randomized controlled trials, 378 subjects | 4–5 cups of black tea | Netherland | The SBP and DBP were decreased by 1.8 mmHg and 1.3 mmHg. Good methodology, and trusted results | 2014 [ |
| 4 | Meta-analysis | 25 eligible studies, 1476 subjects | Both green and black tea intake,≥ 12 weeks | USA | Long-term (≥12 weeks) ingestion of tea could result in a significant Reduction in SBP and DBP Good methodology, a large population analysis and trusted results | 2014 [ |
| 5 | Meta-analysis | 10 trials (834 participants) hypertensive individuals | Tea regular consumption | UK | Significant reductions in SBP (2.36 mmHg) and DBP (1.77 mmHg). Good methodology and trusted results. | 2015 [ |
| 6 | Meta-analysis | 971 overweight and obese adult participants (47% women) | Green tea or green tea extract | China | Significant reduction in both SBP (1.42 mmHg) and DBP (1.25 mmHg). Good methodology and trusted results. | 2015 [ |
| 7 | Multivariable analysis | 472 men and 637 women | Tea (green, black and mixed teas) consumption | China | The consumption of green tea is inversely associated with five-year BP change in Chinese adults, an effect was diminished by smoking. Long term study and trusted results. | 2014 [ |
| 8 | Meta-analysis | 711 men and 796 women | 120 mL/day (half a cup)green or oolong tea, a year | China | Significantly reduces the risk of developing hypertension. A large special population, and trusted results. | 2004 [ |
| 9 | Meta-analysis | 9,856 men and 10,233 women (35–49 years of age) | Black tea regular consumption | Norway | SBP was inversely related to tea consumption with differences of 2.1 mmHg in men and 3.5 mmHg in women. Good methodology, a large population analysis and trusted results. | 1992 [ |
| 10 | Randomized controlled trial | 95 men and women aged 35 to 75 who were regular tea drinkers | 3 cups/d of regular black tea consumption, ≥ 6 months | Australia | Reductions in SBP and DBP of between 2 and 3 mmHg. A small population trial, and a reasonable result. | 2012 [ |
| 11 | Double-blind parallel multicenter trial | 240 Japanese women and men with visceral fat-type obesity | 583 mg of catechins or 96 mg of catechins per day, green tea | Japan | Catechin group decreased initial SBP that is 130 mmHg or higher. A small population trial, and a reasonable result. | 2007 [ |
| 12 | Randomized controlled trial | Overweight or obese male subjects, aged 40–65 years | 400 mg capsules of EGCG ( | UK | EGCG treatment did reduce DBP (mean change: placebo -0·058 mmHg; EGCG -2·68 mmHg). A small population trial, and a reasonable result. | 2009 [ |
| 13 | Randomized clinical trial | Obese pre-hypertensive women | 500 mg of GTE or a matching placebo consumption, four weeks | Brazil | Short-term daily intake of GTE may decrease BP in obese pre-hypertensive women. A small population, short term trial, and a reasonable result. | 2016 [ |
| 14 | Double-blind | 56 obese, hypertensive subjects | Daily supplement 379 mg of GTE or a matching placebo, 3 months | Poland | Both SBP and DBP had significantly decreased compared with the placebo group. A small population trial, and a reasonable result. | 2012 [ |
| 15 | Randomized, double-blind | 19 patients | Black tea (129 mg flavonoids) or a placebo twice a day for eight days. | Italy | Black tea consumption decreases SBP and DBP by 3.2 mmHg and 2.6 mmHg, respectively, and prevented BP increase after a fat consumption. A small population trial may results in bias result. | 2015 [ |
| 16 | Randomized clinical trial | 100 stage1 hypertensive patients with diabetes | Drink green tea infusion three times a day 2 hours after each meal, four weeks | Iran | Stage1 hypertensive type 2 diabetic individuals who drink green tea daily show significantly lower SBP and DBP. A small population trial, and a reasonable result. | 2013 [ |
| 17 | Cross-sectional study | 60 volunteers, fasting blood glucose levels of ≥6.1 mmol/L or non-fasting blood glucose levels of ≥7.8 mmol/L | 544 mg polyphenols (456 mg catechins) daily consumption, 3 months | Japan | Supplementation of GTE powder led to a significant reduction in DBP, but no significant changes in SBP. A small population trial, and a reasonable result. | 2008 [ |
| 18 | Cross-sectional study | 218 women over 70 years old | 250 mL/day (one cup) | Australia | Regular tea consumption may have a favorable effect on BP in older women. A small population trial, and a reasonable result. | 2003 [ |
| 19 | Cross-sectional study | 4579 adults aged 60 years or older | tea consumption questionnaire | China | Higher tea consumption frequency was associated with lower systolic BP. A large population trial, and a reasonable result. | 2017 [ |
Figure 1The underlying mechanisms of tea regulating blood pressure using animal, tissue and cell line models. After intake or adding into cell cultures, tea and its bioactive ingredients can alter several blood pressure regulating processes, including ① alleviation of the oxidative stress and improvement of the endothelial function in the aortas in vivo; ② mitigation of the inflammation and amelioration of the endothelial function in the aortic epithelial cell lines in vitro; ③ suppression of contractile response and improvement of vasodilation in the aortic tissues in vitro; ④,⑤ inhibition of renal sympathetic nerve activity and amelioration of arterial baroreceptor. Abbreviation: SOD, superoxide dismutase; HO-1, heme oxygenase 1; NOX, NADPH oxidase; p-AKT, phosphorylated protein kinase B; p-eNOS, phosphorylated endothelial nitric oxide synthase; NO, nitric oxide; PI3 Kinase, phosphatidylinositol 3 kinase; IL6, Interleukin 6; TNFα, Tumor necrosis factor α; MCP-1, Monocyte chemotactic protein-1; ET-1, Endothelin-1; RSNA, renal sympathetic nerve activity.