| Literature DB >> 35564056 |
Chiung-Ying Yang1, Kuang-Chen Hung2,3, Yea-Yin Yen4, Hung-En Liao1, Shou-Jen Lan1, Hsin-Cheng Lin2,3.
Abstract
This study adopted systematic literature review and meta-analysis methodology to explored anti-oxidative effect of pu-erh tea. Study authors have systemically searched seven databases up until 21 February 2020. In performing the literature search on the above-mentioned databases, the authors used keywords of pu-erh AND (superoxide dismutase OR glutathione peroxidase OR malondialdehyde). Results derived from meta-analyses showed statistically significant effects of pu-erh tea on reducing serum MDA levels (SMD, -4.19; 95% CI, -5.22 to -3.15; p < 0.001; I2 = 93.67%); increasing serum SOD levels (SMD, 2.41; 95% CI, 1.61 to 3.20; p < 0.001; I2 = 91.36%); and increasing serum GSH-Px levels (SMD, 4.23; 95% CI, 3.10 to 5.36; p < 0.001; I2 = 93.69%). Results from systematic review and meta-analyses validated that various ingredients found in pu-erh tea extracts had anti-oxidation effects, a long-held conventional wisdom with limited supporting evidence.Entities:
Keywords: anti-oxidative effect; meta-analysis; pu-erh tea; systematic review
Year: 2022 PMID: 35564056 PMCID: PMC9100797 DOI: 10.3390/foods11091333
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Figure 1Flowchart of search results and article retrieval.
System review of pu-erh tea anti-oxidative effect in rats.
| Study | Animals | Intervention | Duration | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hou, Shao, et al. (2009) | Male SD Rats | Rats were treated with water extracts of fermented or unfermented pu-erh tea. | 30 days |
Compared to the hyperlipidemic control group, activities of SOD and GSH-Px in serum were significantly elevated in pu-erh tea-treated groups, while levels of MAD decreased in the same groups. These effects were most pronounced in the groups treated with the highest dose of fermented pu-erh tea extract. The study results suggest that pu-erh tea exerts strong antioxidative and lipid-lowering effects and therefore can be used to reduce the risk of cardiovascular disorders. |
| Jiang et al. (2009) | Male SD Rats | Rats were fed with high-lipid diet, oolong tea, herb, and fermented and unfermented | 35 days |
The result indicated that SOD content reduced significantly in treatment group, while MDA and GSH-Px increased. The result concluded that the herb, oolong tea, and pu-erh tea are able to regulate the level of serum anti-oxidation. |
| Hou, Xiao, et al. (2009) | Male SD Rats | Rats were treated with water extracts fermented or unfermented pu-erh tea. | 30 days |
The activities of SOD and GSH-Px increased, with the contents of MDA in serum markedly decreased. Pu-erh tea processed with different techniques has effects of anti-oxidative and anti-hyperlipidemia and contributes to reduce the risk of atherosclerosis. |
| Xu et al. (2010) | Male SD Rats | Rats were fed with high-lipid diet, oolong tea, and water extracts of fermented and unfermented pu-erh tea. | 35 days |
At experimental endpoint, blood lipids levels, activities of SOD, GSH-Px, and MDA in serum were measured. The comparison among fermenting and fermented pu-erh tea groups and model group revealed that activities of SOD and GSH-Px increased significantly; however, the MDA contents decreased in pu-erh tea groups. The effect of fermented pu-erh tea was more significant than fermenting pu-erh tea. |
| Liu et al. (2013) | Wistar Rats | Rats were divided into normal group, hyperlipidemia model group, fermented pu-erh tea group, Tieguanyin group, and low-, medium-, and high-dose black tea group, respectively. | 35 days |
The aim was to detect the expression of hepatocyte cytochrome in rat non-alcoholic steatosis model. All rats were sacrificed after 35 days’ feeding; serum levels of MDA, GSH-Px, and SOD transaminase activity and pathological changes of the liver were observed. RT-PCR method was used to test expression quantity in rat cells. Compared to the hyperlipidemia model group, the serum levels of MDA in low-dose group of the fermented pu-erh tea were significantly decreased (<0.05); fermented pu-erh Tea had a better effect on improving enzyme activity of GSH-Px and SOD than those of Tieguanyin and black tea. |
| Q. Wang et al. (2013) | Male SD Rats | Rats were divided into 6 groups,: a normal control group; a hyperlipidemia model group; and low-, medium-, and high-dose treatment group. | 7 days |
In vivo, the extract from Zijuan pu-erh tea-treated rat groups showed significantly increased serum SOD and GSH-Px activities and reduced MDA in the hyperlipidemia model group. The serum SOD and GSH-Px activities concentration were 66.88 and 29.09 higher, respectively, whereas the serum MDA concentrations were 59.11% lower in the high-dose treatment group than in the hyperlipidemia model group. These results showed that pu-erh extract has a good anti-oxidative function and can be considered as a natural antioxidant source. |
| R. Wang et al. (2013) | Wistar Rats | Rats were divided into 6 groups: a normal control group; a hyperlipidemia model group; and low-, medium-, and high-dose treatment group. | 60 days |
The study investigated the effects of fermented pu-erh tea on lipid peroxidation in alcoholic fatty liver rats. The result showed that compared to the positive control group, the serum levels of SOD and GSH-Px in medium- and high-dose groups of the fermented pu-erh tea are significantly increased. The liver GSH-Px in high-dose group of fermented pu-erh tea and SOD in medium- and high-dose groups of the fermented pu-erh tea are significantly increased. The serum levels of MDA in low-, medium-, and high-dose group of the fermented pu-erh tea group and the liver tissue level of MDA in high-dose group of the fermented pu-erh tea are significantly decreased. |
| Su et al. (2016) | SD Rats | Fifty SD rats were divided into five groups: a normal control group; a hyperlipidemia model group; and low-, medium-, and high-dose treatment group. | 12 weeks |
Reducing oxidative stress and hepatoprotective effect of Pu-erh tea water extracts on rats fed with high-fat diet were researched for explaining health care of Pu-erh tea. The result demonstrated that Pu-erh extract caused the decreases MDA levels, and the increases in hepatic SOD and GSH-Px activities, indicating that the extract may be reducing oxidant stress state and inhibiting lipid peroxidation, thus decreasing the activities of ALT and AST, and protecting the liver in rat. |
| Zheng et al. (2020) | SD Rats | The rats were randomly assigned into 4 groups: Control group; | 28 days |
Ganpu tea is an emerging tea drink produced from pu-erh tea and the pericarp of Ganpu tea and GCP could significantly enhance the activities of SOD by 13.4% and 15.1% as well as the activities of GSH-Px by 16.3% and 20.5%, respectively. |
SYRCLE’s Risk-of-Bias Tool.
| SYRCLE’s Risk of Bias Tool for Animal Studies | Hou et.al., 2009 A [ | Jiang et al., 2009 [ | Hou et al., 2009 B [ | Xu et al., 2010 [ | Liu et al., 2013 [ | Wang et al., 2013 A [ | Wang et al., 2013 B [ | Su et al., 2016 [ | Zheng et al., 2020 [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Was the allocation sequence adequately generated and applied? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 2. Were the groups similar at baseline, or were they adjusted for confounders in the analysis? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 3. Was the allocation adequately concealed? | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear |
| 4. Were the animals randomly housed during the experiment? | Unclear | Yes | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 5. Were the caregivers and/or investigators blinded from knowledge of which intervention each animal received during the experiment? | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear |
| 6. Were animals selected at random for outcome assessment? | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No |
| 7. Was the outcome assessor blinded? | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear |
| 8. Were incomplete outcome data adequately addressed? | No | Yes | No | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 9. Are reports of the study free of selective outcome reporting? | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 10. Was the study apparently free of other problems that could result in high risk of bias? | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | No | No | Unclear | No | No | No |
Figure 2Forest plot of decreasing Serum MDA (SMD, −4.19; 95% CI, −5.22 to −3.15; p < 0.001; I2 = 93.67%). Black solid square indicated the individual study’s SMD and the red solid square indicated the polling SMD of the included studies.
Figure 3Forest plot of Elevating Serum SOD (SMD, 2.41; 95% CI, 1.61 to 3.20; p < 0.001; I2 = 91.36%). Black solid square indicated the individual study’s SMD and the red solid square indicated the polling SMD of the included studies.
Figure 4Forest plot of Elevating Serum GSH-Px (SMD, 4.23; 95% CI, 3.10 to 5.36; p < 0.001; I2 = 93.69%). Black solid square indicated the individual study’s SMD and the red solid square indicated the polling SMD of the included studies.