1. Ingestion of green tea with lowered caffeine improves sleep quality of the elderly via suppression of stress
- Author
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Yohei Kawasaki, Kazuaki Iguchi, Shigenori Noda, Akio Morita, Hiroshi Yamada, Yoriyuki Nakamura, and Keiko Unno
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,green tea ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Physiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ingestion ,Medicine ,sleep ,Morning ,Sleep Stages ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,elderly people ,Sleep quality ,business.industry ,food and beverages ,salivary α-amylase ,Theanine ,Green tea ,Sleep in non-human animals ,theanine ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Original Article ,business ,Caffeine ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Epidemiological and animal studies have demonstrated that ingestion of green tea enhances healthy life. However, caffeine in green tea can interfere with sleep. In this report, we examined the effect of green tea with lowered caffeine, low-caffeine green tea, on stress and sleep of the elderly. The participants (n = 10, mean age 89.3 ± 4.2 years) drank five cups/day of standard green tea for 1 week. Subsequently, they drank five cups/day of low-caffeine green tea for 2 weeks. Salivary α-amylase activity (sAA) was measured as a stress marker. Sleep stages were measured using a portable electroencephalography (n = 7, 6 female and 1 male). The level of sAA in the morning (sAAm) was significantly lower when the participants drank low-caffeine green tea than standard green tea. While the levels of sAAm were different among individuals, lower sAAm correlated with a higher quality of sleep. In those participants whose sAAm was lowered by the ingestion of low-caffeine green tea, some sleep parameters improved. Daily ingestion of low-caffeine green tea may be a beneficial tool for improving the quality of sleep of the elderly via the suppression of stress, although further research is required to fortify this hypothesis.
- Published
- 2017