Posts Tagged ‘tea’

A New Research Conducted - Bone Problems for Heavy Tea Drinkers

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010

Medical college of Georgia has been conducting a new research from quite a long time and now they have been successful in knowing that how heavy tea drinkers can come across many of the diseases like the problems of the bone etc.

It has been shown that the concentration of the fluoride in the black tea is much more than it was expected before. The Regents Professor of oral biology in the Dentistry School Dr. Gary Whitford said that normally a person can have 2 to 4 cups of black tea but as we know that excessive of everything is bad, it also has a strong effect on the bones of the individual. In taking of the large amounts of the tea in a single day can lead to various health problems.

heavy tea drinkers suffers with bone problems. 300x199 A New Research Conducted – Bone Problems for Heavy Tea Drinkers offbeatBefore all this research it has been said that the one liter of the black tea in a day only contains 1 to 5 milligrams of the fluoride concentration but now after this new discovery it has been recorded that the percentage of the fluoride can even be quite higher in 1 liter can also go upto 9 to 10 milligrams depending upon the added flavor.

Previously the researchers found that the intake of the fluoride is good for the teeth as it prevents the dental cavity but now it has been noticed that it is causing a great harm to the individual taking more of the black tea.

Read more: A New Research Conducted Bone Problems for Heavy Tea Drinkers - All India Today

Tea contains more fluoride than once thought

Monday, July 19th, 2010
IMAGE: This is Dr. Gary Whitford of the Medical College of Georgia. Black tea, a Southern staple and the world’s most consumed beverage, may contain higher concentrations of fluoride than previously…

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June 14, 2010

AUGUSTA, Ga. – Black tea, a Southern staple and the world’s most consumed beverage, may contain higher concentrations of fluoride than previously thought, which could pose problems for the heaviest tea drinkers, Medical College of Georgia researchers say.

“The additional fluoride from drinking two to four cups of tea a day won’t harm anyone; it’s the very heavy tea drinkers who could get in trouble,” said Dr. Gary Whitford, Regents Professor of oral biology in the School of Dentistry. He presented his findings today at the 2010 International Association of Dental Research Conference in Barcelona, Spain.

Most published reports show 1 to 5 milligrams of fluoride per liter of black tea, but a new study shows that number could be as high as 9 milligrams.

Fluoride is known to help prevent dental cavities, but long-term ingestion of excessive amounts could cause bone problems. The average person ingests a very safe amount, 2 to 3 milligrams, daily through fluoridated drinking water, toothpaste and food. It would take ingesting about 20 milligrams a day over 10 or more years before posing a significant risk to bone health.

Whitford discovered that the fluoride concentration in black tea had long been underestimated when he began analyzing data from four patients with advanced skeletal fluorosis, a disease caused by excessive fluoride consumption and characterized by joint and bone pain and damage. While it is extremely rare in the United States, the common link between these four patients was their tea consumption – each person drank 1 to 2 gallons of tea daily for the past 10 to 30 years.

“When we tested the patients’ tea brands using a traditional method, we found the fluoride concentrations to be very low, so we wondered if that method was detecting all of the fluoride,” Whitford said, noting that the tea plant, Camellia sinensis, creates a quandary when measuring fluoride. Unique among other plants, it accumulates huge concentrations of fluoride and aluminum in its leaves – each mineral ranges from 600 to more than 1,000 milligrams per kilogram of leaves. When the leaves are brewed for tea, some of the minerals leach into the beverage.

Most published studies about black tea traditionally have used a method of measuring fluoride that doesn’t account for the amount that combines with aluminum to form insoluble aluminum fluoride, which is not detected by the fluoride electrode. Whitford compared that method with a diffusion method, which breaks the aluminum-fluoride bond so that all fluoride in the tea samples can be extracted and measured.

He tested seven brands of store-bought black tea, steeping each for five minutes in deionized water, which contains no fluoride. The amount of fluoride in each sample was 1.4 to 3.3 times higher using the diffusion method than the traditional method.

The new information shouldn’t deter tea drinkers, as the beverage is safe and some teas even have health benefits, Whitford said. “The bottom line is to enjoy your favorite tea, but like everything else, drink it in moderation.”

Including Whitford’s presentation, School of Dentistry faculty and students will make 24 oral and poster presentations at the International Association for Dental Research conference July 14-17.

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Faculty and students receiving awards at the conference include:

  • Dr. Ulf Wikesjo, interim associate dean for research and enterprise, recipient of the IADR/Straumann Award in Regenerative Periodontal Medicine.
  • Students James Yoon, Evan Grodin and Quac Tran, finalists for the IADR Young Investigator Award.
  • Students James Yoon, Dhruti Patel, Ashley Smith, Tina Sampat and Shivani Patel, recipients of American Association of Dental Research Bloc Travel Grants.