Catechin Content of 18 Teas and a Green Tea Extract Supplement Correlates With the Antioxidant Capacity
暂无分享,去创建一个
D. Heber | V. Go | S. Henning | C. Fajardo-Lira | H. W. Lee | A. Youssefian
[1] P. Villeneuve,et al. Risk factors for prostate cancer: results from the Canadian National Enhanced Cancer Surveillance System , 1999, Cancer Causes & Control.
[2] M. Inoue,et al. Tea and coffee consumption and the risk of digestive tract cancers: data from a comparative case-referent study in Japan , 1998, Cancer Causes & Control.
[3] Shun-zhang Yu,et al. Green-tea consumption and risk of stomach cancer: a population-based case-control study in Shanghai, China , 1995, Cancer Causes & Control.
[4] R. Goldbohm,et al. Are Coffee, Tea, and Total Fluid Consumption associated with Bladder Cancer Risk? Results from the Netherlands Cohort Study , 2004, Cancer Causes & Control.
[5] Kiyohiko Mabuchi,et al. A prospective study of green tea consumption and cancer incidence, Hiroshima and Nagasaki (Japan) , 2004, Cancer Causes & Control.
[6] W. King,et al. Coffee and tea consumption and cancers of the bladder, colon and rectum , 2002, European journal of cancer prevention : the official journal of the European Cancer Prevention Organisation.
[7] S. Khokhar,et al. Total phenol, catechin, and caffeine contents of teas commonly consumed in the United kingdom. , 2002, Journal of agricultural and food chemistry.
[8] Alicja Wolk,et al. Coffee, tea, and caffeine consumption and breast cancer incidence in a cohort of Swedish women. , 2002, Annals of epidemiology.
[9] James A. Hanley,et al. A Population-Based Case-Control Study of Lung Cancer and Green Tea Consumption among Women Living in Shanghai, China , 2001, Epidemiology.
[10] L. Leung,et al. Theaflavins in black tea and catechins in green tea are equally effective antioxidants. , 2001, The Journal of nutrition.
[11] J. Cerhan,et al. Tea Consumption and Risk of Cancer of the Colon and Rectum , 2001, Nutrition and cancer.
[12] G. Beecher,et al. Catechins are bioavailable in men and women drinking black tea throughout the day. , 2001, The Journal of nutrition.
[13] Zuo-Feng Zhang,et al. Protective effect of green tea on the risks of chronic gastritis and stomach cancer , 2001, International journal of cancer.
[14] R. Goldbohm,et al. Are coffee and tea consumption associated with urinary tract cancer risk? A systematic review and meta-analysis. , 2001, International journal of epidemiology.
[15] Y. Nishino,et al. Green tea and the risk of gastric cancer in Japan. , 2001, The New England journal of medicine.
[16] A. Wolk,et al. Tea Consumption and the Risk of Colorectal Cancer in Sweden , 2001, Nutrition and cancer.
[17] C. la Vecchia,et al. Coffee and Alcohol Intake and Risk of Ovarian Cancer: An Italian Case-Control Study , 2001, Nutrition and cancer.
[18] C. S. Yang,et al. Inhibition of carcinogenesis by dietary polyphenolic compounds. , 2001, Annual review of nutrition.
[19] Yu Huang,et al. Degradation of green tea catechins in tea drinks. , 2001, Journal of agricultural and food chemistry.
[20] H Une,et al. Green tea consumption and chronic atrophic gastritis: a cross-sectional study in a green tea production village. , 2000, Journal of epidemiology.
[21] G. Williamson,et al. Dietary intake and bioavailability of polyphenols. , 2000, The Journal of nutrition.
[22] R. B. Harris,et al. Tea intake and squamous cell carcinoma of the skin: influence of type of tea beverages. , 2000, Cancer epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention : a publication of the American Association for Cancer Research, cosponsored by the American Society of Preventive Oncology.
[23] J. Cerhan,et al. Tea consumption and risk of bladder and kidney cancers in a population-based case-control study. , 2000, American journal of epidemiology.
[24] G. Yang,et al. Tea and tea polyphenols in cancer prevention. , 2000, The Journal of nutrition.
[25] N. Subramanian,et al. Role of polyphenol oxidase and peroxidase in the generation of black tea theaflavins. , 1999, Journal of agricultural and food chemistry.
[26] R. Prior,et al. Measurement of oxygen radical absorbance capacity in biological samples. , 1999, Methods in enzymology.
[27] W. Ye,et al. Diet and gastric cancer: a casecontrol study in Fujian Province, China. , 1998, World journal of gastroenterology.
[28] Y. Higashi,et al. Influence of Drinking Green Tea on Breast Cancer Malignancy among Japanese Patients , 1998, Japanese journal of cancer research : Gann.
[29] A. Ronco,et al. Consumption of tea and coffee and the risk of lung cancer in cigarette-smoking men: a case-control study in Uruguay. , 1998, Lung cancer.
[30] J. Bushman. Green tea and cancer in humans: a review of the literature. , 1998, Nutrition and cancer.
[31] K. Nakachi,et al. Cancer-preventive effects of drinking green tea among a Japanese population. , 1997, Preventive medicine.
[32] C. la Vecchia,et al. Coffee and tea intake and risk of cancers of the colon and rectum: A study of 3,530 cases and 7,057 controls , 1997, International journal of cancer.
[33] S. Wiseman,et al. The chemistry of tea flavonoids. , 1997, Critical reviews in food science and nutrition.
[34] J. Fraumeni,et al. Green tea consumption and the risk of pancreatic and colorectal cancers , 1997, International journal of cancer.
[35] R. Prior,et al. Antioxidant and prooxidant behavior of flavonoids: structure-activity relationships. , 1997, Free radical biology & medicine.
[36] W. Chow,et al. Cancer rates among drinkers of black tea. , 1997, Critical reviews in food science and nutrition.
[37] R. Prior,et al. Antioxidant Capacity of Tea and Common Vegetables , 1996 .
[38] C. Rice-Evans,et al. The antioxidant properties of theaflavins and their gallate esters — radical scavengers or metal chelators? , 1996, FEBS letters.
[39] T. J. Doyle,et al. Tea consumption and cancer incidence in a prospective cohort study of postmenopausal women. , 1996, American journal of epidemiology.
[40] J. Fraumeni,et al. The influence of cigarette smoking, alcohol, and green tea consumption on the risk of carcinoma of the cardia and distal stomach in Shanghai, China , 1996, Cancer.
[41] R. Goldbohm,et al. Consumption of black tea and cancer risk: a prospective cohort study. , 1996, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
[42] S A van Acker,et al. Structural aspects of antioxidant activity of flavonoids. , 1996, Free radical biology & medicine.
[43] A. Tamakoshi,et al. Tea Consumption and Lung Cancer Risk: A Case‐Control Study in Okinawa, Japan , 1995, Japanese journal of cancer research : Gann.
[44] C. Rice-Evans,et al. Polyphenolic flavanols as scavengers of aqueous phase radicals and as chain-breaking antioxidants. , 1995, Archives of biochemistry and biophysics.
[45] H. Li,et al. Analysis of plasma and urinary tea polyphenols in human subjects. , 1995, Cancer epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention : a publication of the American Association for Cancer Research, cosponsored by the American Society of Preventive Oncology.
[46] J K McLaughlin,et al. Reduced risk of esophageal cancer associated with green tea consumption. , 1994, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
[47] C. la Vecchia,et al. Tea consumption and cancer risk. , 1992, Nutrition and cancer.
[48] L. Majem,et al. Diet and gastric cancer: a case-control study , 1991 .