channelnewsasia.com - Hot tea linked with throat cancer
   
 
  blogs  
 
yournews
   
   
Video Finance Lifestyle Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
Health News

 
 

Hot tea linked with throat cancer
Posted: 27 March 2009 0848 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 

PARIS : People who drink their tea piping hot run a higher risk of throat cancer than counterparts who prefer a cooler cuppa, according to an investigation published Friday by the British Medical Journal.

Cancer of the oesophagus is linked especially to smoking and alcohol abuse but hot beverages have also been considered a risk factor, possibly because of damage to throat tissue.

Interested in finding out more, Iranian researchers went to Golestan province, which has one of the highest rates of oesophageal cancer in the world.

Inhabitants there sip large quantities of hot black tea - typically drinking more than a litre (1.8 pints) per day per person - but also have a low incidence of tobacco and alcohol use.

A team led by Reza Malekzadeh of the Digestive Disease Research Centre at Tehran University of Medical Sciences looked at 300 people who had been diagnosed with a throat tumour and a matched group of 571 healthy people who lived in the same area.

Those who drank hot tea (between 65-69 degrees Celsius, 149-156 degrees Fahrenheit) were twice as likely to develop throat cancer compared with those who drank warm or lukewarm tea, whose temperature was 65 C (149 F) or less.

Drinking very hot tea (at least 70 C, 158 F) was associated with an eightfold increased risk compared with warm or lukewarm tea.

In an editorial, The Lancet said the study backed evidence that scorching fluids may cause damage to the throat's epithelial lining and lead to cancer, although exactly how this happens remains unclear.

But it also said that there was no cause for panic, as most people tend to drink tea at a warm temperature. Previous studies in Britain have reported an average temperature preference of 56-60 C (133-140 F).

It recommended that tea junkies wait at least four minutes before drinking from a freshly boiled cup.

The study said there was no association between the amount of tea that was consumed and the risk of cancer.

Its scope did not include an assessment of risk for coffee and other hot beverages.

- AFP/il

 

 
Add Your Comments   View Comments ()
Name : E-mail:
Your views   (Max 600 chars)
word count:   more chars available.
........................................................................................................................................
Enter the code exactly as you see it.
I have read terms & conditions
  



Other health News
Smoking: once, twice, three times a danger, study finds
Oncologist says too early to link soft drinks to pancreatic cancer
Lancet formally retracts 1998 paper linking vaccine and autism
Brush the stress away
Healthy adults need less sleep as they age: study
Just do it barefoot: running shoeless is better
New target for fighting Alzheimer's: study
Tiptoe and potential woes
High levels of vitamin D cut risk of colon cancer: study
Quitting smoking after lung cancer diagnosis helps survival
Avoiding addiction to painkillers
Is too much sitting as bad as too little exercise?
Being straight with your boss cuts stress: study
Well-covered bum and big hips 'good for health': study
New York restaurants, food industry pushed to cut back on salt

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions