Green Tea Fat Burner Pills - Should You Try Them?
October 26th, 2009 | green tea |
For centuries, people in China, India,Japan, and other countries in the Far East have harnessed the power of tea and other herbal remedies. Green tea is one of the most powerful of the herbal treatments and drinks. Now you too can harness this power to improve your health with green tea fat burner pills.
There are three different types of tea: green tea, black tea, and oolong tea. Black tea is probably the most popular tea outside the orient. This type of tea is made from fully fermented tea leaves. Oolong tea is starting to become popular and is made from partially fermented tea leaves. The variety of tea that is probably the healthiest and contains the highest concentration of antioxidants is green tea. It is made from non-fremented tea leaves.
Polyphenols, the antioxidant that is so prevalent in green tea, have been the topic of many scientific studies and are thought to be very beneficial. In general, antioxidants are beneficial because they neutralize free radicals in our body. If left alone, free radicals attack healthy cells and may cause or contribute to numerous diseases. Green tea, and the antioxidants in them, have been the focus of numerous studies for treatment of many diseases including inflammation caused by Crohn’s disease, high cholesterol, coronary heart disease, and even general weight loss.
Scientific studies conducted with green tea as it relates to weight loss have shown some interesting possibilities. The studies show that green tea fat burner supplements my help you burn fat and increase your metabolism. At least one study showed that a green tea fat burner pill improved weight loss in overweight and moderately obese participants. Some researchers think the catechins, one of the specific polyphenols in green tea, are what cause the fat burning effect in green tea. Regardless of the reason, according to the studies it works.
You can find many studies on the health benefits of green tea if you do a little searching. The information in this article were taken from a report published on the University of Maryland website. The report is very long and has more details on many different green tea studies. You can see the specific article at umm.edu/altmed/articles/green-tea-000255.htm.