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Originally published January 2 2006

Health journal publishes new study on antioxidants in tea waste

by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, NaturalNews Editor

Food Chemistry has published an Iranian study that found tea waste was richly concentrated with antioxidants that could be extracted through various methods.



The study, carried out by the Ferdowsi University of Mashhad, investigated three extraction methods on different parts of the tea plant, and tea waste, and found surprisingly high levels of antioxidants across all of the extracts. Tea leaves that have already matured on the plant and the waste that is left after fermenting black tea, "are often considered as agricultural wastes", said Dr Reza Farhoosh, the author of the study. But they "could be used as potent natural antioxidative sources". European demand for tea extracts is currently surging, having reached 500 metric tonnes by 2003. Green tea and green tea extracts are currently produced from only the first two to four leaves of the tea plant (Camellia sinensis). The Iranian study reported high extraction yields of polyphenols from OTL and BTW, including epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG), one of the most widely researched polyphenols in green tea. For both green tea and black tea waste, the most efficient of the three methods was hot water extraction, which delivered yields of 35 per cent for fresh green tea leaves and a close-running 30 per cent for BTW. Extracts from green tea are now well established as sources of polyphenols -- containing a rich source of free radical scavenging catechins. Recent data suggests these compounds play a beneficial role in weight loss, cardiovascular and oral health, with some now emerging as particularly powerful. This has seen companies such as DSM, with its Teavigo boasting 95 per cent purity of epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG), and Taiyo International, with its Sunphenon claiming more than 90 per cent purity, position themselves firmly in specific catechin markets. The Iranian research was presented at the 6th International Conference on Food Science and Technology, and is available online from the Elsevier journal Food Chemistry.


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