The therapeutic potential of matcha tea: A critical review on human and animal studies

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.crfs.2022.11.015Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Matcha decreases stress and anxiety, improves memory and short- and long-term cognitive function in humans, while having no effect on mood.

  • Studies on mice showed that matcha enhanced spatial learning, upregulated Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor and insulin-degrading enzyme leading to reduced neuroinflammation.

  • Matcha improves lipid profile and glucose metabolism, reduces inflammation and results in lower weight gain due to high fat diet in mice.

  • In vitro studies showed the anti-tumor effect of matcha by reducing viability, mitochondrial metabolism, ATP production and oxygen consumption of breast cancer cells by disrupting cell cycle regulation and interleukin signaling.

Abstract

Matcha is a powdered form of Japanese green tea that has been gaining global popularity recently. Matcha tea has various health benefits, including an enhancing effect on cognitive function, cardio-metabolic health, and anti-tumorogenesis. To date, randomized clinical trials (RCT) showed that matcha decreases stress, slightly enhances attention and memory, and has no effect on mood. Results regarding the effect of matcha on cognitive function are contradictory and more RCTs are warranted. The cardio-metabolic effects of matcha have only been studied in animals, but findings were more homogenous. Consuming matcha with a high-fat diet resulted in decreased weight gain velocity, food intake, improved serum glucose and lipid profile, reduced inflammatory cytokines and ameliorated oxidative stress. Evidence regarding the anti-tumor function of matcha is very limited. Findings showed that matcha can affect proliferation, viability, antioxidant response, and cell cycle regulation of breast cancer cells. Nonetheless, more studies are needed to examine this effect on different types of cancer cells, and there is also a need to verify it using animal models. Overall, the evidence regarding the effect of matcha tea on cognitive function, cardio-metabolic function, and anti-tumor role is still limited, and conclusions cannot be drawn.

Keywords

Matcha tea
Catechins
Cognitive function
Cardio-metabolic
Anti-tumor

Data availability

No data was used for the research described in the article.

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