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Journal ArticleDOI

Determination of trace elements in herbal tea products and their infusions consumed in Thailand.

TLDR
The daily intake of all elements from these herbal tea infusions (three cups/day) is still within the average daily intake, and may not produce any health risks for human consumption, if other sources of toxic metal contaminated food are not taken at the same time.
Abstract
Nineteen elements, Mg, Al, Ca, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Se, Sr, Sb, Ba, As, Cd, Hg, and Pb, were determined in three types of popular herbal tea products, Gynostemma pentaphyllum, Camellia sinensis, and Morus alba. These herbal tea products, both imported and locally made products, are widely consumed in Thailand and worldwide. Microwave-assisted acid digestion was used for all of the samples, and the element contents were determined by ICP-MS. The concentrations of all elements varied among these herbal teas. Ca and Mg were the most abundant elements in all herbal samples (1384-34070 and 783-7739 mg/kg, respectively). Most elements in these herbal tea powders were also released into the infusions at different percentages depending on types of herbs. G. pentaphyllum infusion contained essential elements (Mg, Ca, V, and Fe) at higher levels than C. sinensis and M.alba infusions. Al and Ni were present at high levels in C. sinensis infusion, and Cd level was high in M. alba infusion. The daily intake of all elements from these herbal tea infusions (three cups/day) is still within the average daily intake. Therefore, it may not produce any health risks for human consumption, if other sources of toxic metal contaminated food are not taken at the same time.

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Trace elements in tea leaves, made tea and tea infusion: A review

TL;DR: In this article, the authors made an attempt to update and evaluate the knowledge of the presence of some selected trace elements in tea leaves, made tea and tea infusion, based on the available literature.
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Fructose-fed streptozotocin-injected rat: an alternative model for type 2 diabetes

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the 10% fructose-fed followed by 40 mg/kg of BWSTZ injected rat can be a new and alternative model for T2D and higher fluid intake, blood glucose, serum lipids, liver glycogen, liver function enzymes and insulin resistance and significantly lower body weight, oral glucose tolerance, number of pancreatic β-cells and pancreaticβ-cell functions (HOMA-β) of FR10 group.
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Tea and its consumption: benefits and risks.

TL;DR: The limitless health-promoting benefits of tea outclass its few reported toxic effects, and this review is intended to highlight the beneficial effects and risks associated with tea consumption.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sample Preparation for the Determination of Metals in Food Samples Using Spectroanalytical Methods—A Review

TL;DR: In this paper, an overview of modern techniques of sample preparation for food analysis employing atomic and inorganic mass spectrometric techniques, such as flame atomic absorption, chemical vapor generation atomic absorption and atomic fluorescence spectrometry, graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometer, inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometrization, and induction coupled plasma mass spectroscopy, is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Determination of trace elements in commonly consumed medicinal herbs by ICP-MS and multivariate analysis.

TL;DR: The concentrations of Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Rb, Sr and Pb elements in thirty medicinal herb samples widely consumed in Kayseri, Turkey were determined by using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Chemoprevention of Human Prostate Cancer by Oral Administration of Green Tea Catechins in Volunteers with High-Grade Prostate Intraepithelial Neoplasia: A Preliminary Report from a One-Year Proof-of-Principle Study

TL;DR: To the authors' knowledge, this is the first study showing that GTCs are safe and very effective for treating premalignant lesions before CaP develops and International Prostate Symptom Score and quality of life scores of G TCs-treated men with coexistent benign prostate hyperplasia improved, reaching statistical significance in the case of International Pro prostate symptom Scores.
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Some aspects of toxic contaminants in herbal medicines

TL;DR: This paper illustrates how advances in chemical and biomedical analysis would help to detect intentional and unintentional toxic contaminants in herbal substances and how modernization and progress are being carried out to get the best out of Chinese medicines for public healthcare.
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Polyphenolic compounds, antioxidant capacity, and quinone reductase activity of an aqueous extract of Ardisia compressa in comparison to mate (Ilex paraguariensis) and green (Camellia sinensis) teas.

TL;DR: The results suggest that AC has a different mechanism of protection against cytotoxicity that is not related to its antioxidant capacity and further studies are needed to explore its potential as a chemopreventive or therapeutic agent.
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Hypoglycemic effect of Egyptian Morus alba root bark extract : Effect on diabetes and lipid peroxidation of streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats

TL;DR: The data obtained from this study revealed that MRBF-3 may protect pancreatic beta cells from degeneration and diminish lipid peroxidation, however, this is the first biological screening of the Egyptian Morus alba root bark; further future merit studies including clinical study will be necessary in order to confirm the results obtained.
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Differentiation of Tea (Camellia sinensis) Varieties and Their Geographical Origin According to their Metal Content

TL;DR: Pattern recognition methods such as principal component analysis (PCA), linear discriminant analysis (LDA), and artificial neural networks (ANN), were applied to differentiate the tea types and provided the best results in the classification of tea varieties.
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