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RealAge Tip

Sip Black Tea to Lower Parkinson's Risk

By RealAge

Older Woman drinking Tea

This Week's Tips

Tea time. What better way to give your body and mind a little breather? But if you choose a certain color of tea, you may really do your brain a favor.

A large study in Singapore showed that black tea might have the power to slash Parkinson's disease risk by almost a third.

Hormone Helper?
In the study, people who drank the most black tea were 29 percent less likely to develop Parkinson's disease (PD), compared with the least enthusiastic black-tea drinkers. Although the researchers were poised to credit the caffeine in black tea for the benefit, it turned out not to be so. Instead, it may be that black tea somehow affects estrogen levels in a favorable anti-Parkinson's way (the disease is less common in women than in men). Interestingly, green tea showed no protective effects against PD. But there are still plenty of reasons -- like these -- to sip green.

More Tea-Time Extras
There's no shortage of other reasons to drink tea, including:

Exercising your mind is a great brain-saver, too. Give your mental muscle a workout with this fast-paced match-up game.

RealAge Benefit:

Getting the right amount of antioxidants through diet or supplements can make your RealAge 6 years younger.

 
References
Published on 03/02/2009

Differential effects of black versus green tea on risk of Parkinson's disease in the Singapore Chinese Health Study. Tan, L. C. et al., American Journal of Epidemiology 2008 Mar 1;167(5):553-560.


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