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Green Tea Component Might Fight Sepsis
MANHASSET, N.Y., Nov. 8 (UPI) -- A U.S. study suggested a component of
green tea might be useful in treating severe sepsis -- an abnormal immune
system response to a bacterial infection.
Haichao Wang
and colleagues at the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research studied
the therapeutic effects of dozens of Chinese herbal compounds in reversing
sepsis, which kills 225,000 people in the United States annually.
In a mouse study,
the scientists found a green tea extract -- EGCG -- caused survival rates
of mice suffering sepsis increased from 53 percent in those not receiving
EGCG to 82 percent in those that did.
"Clinically,
even if we could save 5 percent of patients, that would be huge," said
Wang. "In this study, we saved 25 percent more animals with the green tea."
The researchers
said their findings could pave the way for clinical trials.
The study, conducted
in collaboration with Wei Li and Dr. Andrew Sama chairman of emergency
medicine at North Shore University Hospital, appears in the online journal
PLoS One.
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