Matcha Green Tea: Health Benefits
One of the reasons why matcha green tea is popular is for its wide range of purported health benefits. From teeth to weight loss, it seems like matcha green tea has been associated with things that can do something for everyone.
Much of this reason is because matcha green tea is basically whole leaves grounded into a fine powder, resulting in even higher levels of polyphenols, flavonoids, catechins and amino acids than regular green tea.
Grab a cup, sit back, and enjoy this HUGE list of many of the great things matcha green tea has been associated with:
1. Matcha green tea might have the potential to fight and prevent cancer.
Green tea contains powerful antioxidants called catechins — the most powerful catechin found in green tea is EGCG (epigallocatechin gallate), which could have many potential benefits.
In a 2012 study from the University of Chicago, researchers found that the EGCG in green tea could have anticancer benefits.
A review in the 2014 World Journal of Clinical Oncology suggested that green tea extract could potentially help with breast cancer. Canadian scientists also found similar benefits against breast cancer from their own meta-analysis.
Scientists from LSU found that a brief treatment with EGCG could significantly reduce serum markers such as PSA, VGF and VEGF that predict the progression of prostate cancer.
In 2012, Taiwanese researchers even found that drinking at least one cup of green tea per day was associated with a decreased risk of lung cancer in smokers.
Oh, and if you buy your tea at Starbucks, you might want to read this: Researchers from the University of Colorado found that the concentration of EGCG available from drinking matcha “is 137 times greater than the amount of EGCG available from China Green Tips green tea” (which is the green tea sold at Starbucks). Make sure you get quality grade tea!
Researchers from the United Kingdom even found that the EGCG in green tea may potentially have an anti-HIV effect.
2. Matcha tea could reduce the risk heart disease.
Spanish researchers reviewed a variety of studies and associated green tea and its flavonoid, catechin, with a decrease cholesterol absorption and plasma levels, a reduction in platelet aggregation, and lower blood pressure.
Research from the Harvard Medical School issued findings that the antioxidants in green tea can possibly help block the oxidation of LDL (bad) cholesterol while increasing HDL (good) cholesterol and improving artery function.
And in a prospective, 6-year study of 14,001 Japanese elderly people in the Annals of Epidemiology, researchers found that green tea consumption was associated with a significantly reduced mortality from cardiovascular disease.
3. Matcha may help you lose weight.
Research in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that a green tea extract significantly increased the energy expenditure (the body’s ability to burn calories) and fat oxidation in humans. German researchers also found that the EGCG in green tea increased fat oxidation and helped to lower body fat and BMI.
A 12-week study also found that a group that took green tea extract (which is high in catechins) lost significantly more weight, fat mass, and waist circumference than a control group that drank a tea low in catechins.
4. Green tea could promote healthy teeth and gums.
A 2009 study by the American Academy of Periodontology suggests that green tea’s antioxidant, catechin, could reduce periodontal disease and improve oral health.
5. Want a mental boost?
Matcha is rich in L-Theanine, an amino acid that may be associated with relaxation and alertness in brain function. Dutch researchers, for example, suggested that the L-Theanine in green tea increases alpha activity in the brain, which could enhance mental alertness and attention. As an extra benefit, L-Theanine could improve memory and learning as a cognitive enhancing agent — it might be exactly what you need the next time you’re studying or remembering something important!
A study in 2011 suggested that the EGCG in green tea (as well as other flavonoids) could play a role in reducing a certain aspect of Alzheimer’s disease.
6. Matcha can also help you fight stress!
In 2007, Japanese researchers found that the L-Theanine in green tea leaves was associated with a reduction in physiological and psychological stress responses in the sympathetic nervous system. In 1999, researchers also showed that the same amino acid in green tea may significantly relax the mind without inducing drowsiness.
7. If you have arthritis, matcha could potentially help.
A study from the University of Toledo in 2013 suggested that the ECGC in matcha green tea could help against the inflammation from rheumatoid arthritis.
8. Matcha might boost your exercise and fitness too.
In a ten-week study, Japanese researchers found that supplementing with green tea extract boosted exercise endurance by 8% — 24% by increasing the body’s use of fat as an energy source.
Now, we’re not saying that matcha green tea is a miracle drink that will cure everything — not at all! But we want to share the research publicly available on the benefits associated from elements within matcha green tea so you can get the education you deserve.Interesting stuff!
Many of these studies, however, caution that more research is needed to make a strong conclusion so who knows what the next few years of science could discover!