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The effects of tea polyphenols on emotional homeostasis: Understanding dementia risk through stress, mood, attention & sleep

Journal

CLINICAL NUTRITION ESPEN
Volume 57, Issue -, Pages 77-88

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.clnesp.2023.06.008

Keywords

Camellia sinensis; mood; Emotion; Stress; Wellbeing

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Decades of research have shown that certain phytochemicals in tea and other herbal beverages can protect against sporadic dementia in later life. Tea drinking is a widely adopted practice that can be targeted to design low-cost dietary interventions for Alzheimer's Disease. This review focuses on the protective roles of tea-derived polyphenols and other phytochemicals on mood, stress, attention, and sleep, and emphasizes the need for early lifestyle interventions for dementia prevention.
Decades of research provide evidence that certain phytochemicals in tea (Camellia sinensis) and other herbal beverages are protective against the development of sporadic types of dementia in later life. Since tea drinking is an economical and widely adopted social-cultural practice across all age groups, it is an ideal product to target in designing low-cost dietary interventions for Alzheimer's Disease (AD), the most prevalent form of dementia. In this review, we focus on the protective roles of tea-derived polyphenols and other phytochemicals on mood, the stress response, attention, and sleep, in keeping with the perspective that many early neuropathological events in AD may stem, in part, from allostatic overload. This approach aligns with the perspective that many forms of dementia, including AD, begin to take root in the brain decades prior to symptom onset, underscoring the need for early uptake of accessible and viable lifestyle interventions. The findings reviewed here suggest that consuming green and oolong tea can improve mood and reduce overall stress. However, given the caffeine content in tea and its association with stress reactivity, the effects of daily whole tea consumption on the emotional state are likely dose-dependent with an inverted-U relationship to wellbeing. Plant-based beverages that are to be consumed in high daily quantities for health purposes and which are naturally free of caffeine, such as Rooibos, may be more appropriate as a dietary supplement for managing emotional regulation over the lifetime. & COPY; 2023 European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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