|
The health benefits of green tea dovetail into sleep
as researchers in Japan find an amino acid located in green tea could
improve slumber in young men, writes Lindsey Partos.
The small study used the pure, enzymatically produced L-theanine dietary
supplement Suntheanine manufactured by functional ingredients company
Taiyo Kagaku Japan.
“Our clinical study strongly suggests that Suntheanine supplementation
of young men can improve both the quality of sleep and the mental state
of being refreshed on waking up,” said the study’s author,
Dr Shuichiro Shirakawa, a professor at The National Center of Neurology
and Psychiatry at the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) in Tokyo.
Rich in cancer-fighting
antioxidants, green tea extracts are steadily being introduced into food
and beverage products. The tea’s active agent Epigallocatecin-3-gallate,
is thought to aid a wide range of health conditions, notably lower cholesterol,
prevent heart disease, fight bacteria and dental cavities, possibly aid
weight loss and slow tumor growth in breast and liver cancers.
The recent study carried out by the NIMH is the first human study to show
that L-theanine, an amino acid found in green tea, can enhance the quality
of actual sleep experienced by young subjects. The research built on previous
human studies that suggested Suntheanine supplementation could foster
‘a relaxed state’.
The research was a blind crossover study involving 22
young men (12 daytime workers with an average age of 28 years, and 10
students with an average age of 26 years). After a three-day acclimatisation
period, the men were given 200mg of L-theanine or a placebo, one hour
before bedtime for six days. They were then crossed over to the other
treatment group.
|
Sleep quality was assessed by interviews on waking
up, self reported questionnaires and a wrist actigraph, to record bodily
movements during sleep.
The researchers report that all subjects reported a significant absence
of feeling exhausted and a reduced need for sleep when administered with
the L-theanine, compared to the placebo.
Seven of the 10 students had improved sleep
efficiency and these same subjects reported a superior mental state prior
to sleep and a decreased occurrence of nightmares. Total sleeping
time did not alter between the two groups.
“We are quite encouraged by the results of this clinical trial with
Suntheanine, which marry well with our previous findings of promoting
a relaxed state as measured by brain alpha waves,” said Scott Smith,
vice president of Taiyo International, the Japanese group’s US subsidiary
based in Minneapolis.
Pushing the benefits of the supplement Smith added that recent research
at Dr Daniel Armstrong’s laboratory at Iowa State University, published
last month in Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, ‘underscores
the chemical differences between Suntheanine and other theanine ingredients’.
An innovative R&D firm, Taiyo Kagaku, which turned over Y34bn of net
sales in 2000, won the Industrial Achievement
award at the IFT Food Expo in June 2000 for its sunphenon green tea polyphenols.
The following month, the Nutracon exhibition presented the company with
‘Nutraceutical of the Year’ award for the suntheanine supplement.
Full findings of the research linking suntheanine to better sleep will
be presented at the ‘17th Congress of the European Sleep Research
Society’, due to be held later this year in Prague, Czech Republic,
October 5-9.
© 2000/2004– NOVIS. – All Rights Reserved.
Courtesy of NutraIngredients
|
|