How Oolong Tea helps in weight Loss?
Facts About Oolong Tea and Weight Loss
Beverages can play a role in your weight loss efforts, with
some adding calories to your daily totals and making weight loss more
difficult, and some providing a calorie-free way to rehydrate. Even better,
certain beverages, including oolong and other teas, may slightly increase
weight loss, although the research is still in the preliminary stages.
Oolong Tea
and Weight Loss
Consuming
oolong tea for six weeks helped participants in a study published in the
Chinese Journal of Integrative Medicine in February 2009 to decrease both their
weight and their body fat. To get the most benefits, drink oolong tea instead
of other higher-calorie beverages, increase the amount of exercise you do, and
follow a balanced, reduced-calorie diet. Oolong tea isn't a weight-loss miracle
beverage that will cause you to lose large amounts of weight on its own. The
weight loss in the study amounted to just a few extra pounds for most
participants over the course of the six-week study.
Facts About
Tea Polyphenols and Weight Loss
The polyphenols in oolong tea are at least partially
responsible for any potential weight-loss benefits. An animal study published
in The Journal of Nutrition in September 2014 reported that the polyphenols
from oolong, green or black tea helped increase weight loss and fat loss even
in the presence of a high-sugar diet. One type of these polyphenols, called
catechins, may help keep your metabolism from slowing down as you lose weight,
according to a review article published in The American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition in October 2013, making it slightly easier to keep losing weight and
maintain that weight loss.
Caffeine's
Effect on Weight Loss
The caffeine in oolong tea is likely just as important for
increasing weight loss as the catechin content. A study published in The
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition in November 2009 found that tea
containing both catechins and caffeine resulted in more weight loss than
consuming either catechins or caffeine alone. These two substances may work
together to help increase your metabolism and the amount of fat you burn while
helping to maintain lean body mass, according to a review article published in
Physiology & Behavior in April 2010, so decaffeinated versions of oolong
tea may not be as helpful for weight loss as regular oolong tea.
Oolong
Versus Green Versus Black Tea
Green tea is known for its high catechin content because it isn't
fermented like black tea, which turns the catechins into another beneficial
plant chemical called theaflavins. Oolong tea, on the other hand, is partially
fermented, so it has an intermediate amount of these compounds. The caffeine
content can vary between the types of tea, with green usually having the least
and black containing the most. Because green tea also has more catechins, it
may have more of an effect on weight loss than oolong tea, while black tea may
have less of an effect on weight loss.
Oolong Tea
Preparation Considerations
You may be better off sticking with hot oolong tea if you're
trying to lose weight, rather than using it to make iced tea. A study published
in the European Journal of Nutrition in April 2013 revealed that drinking hot
tea was associated with a lower body mass index and a smaller waist
circumference, while those who drank a lot of iced tea were more likely to have
higher BMIs and waist circumferences.
When making oolong tea,
use lower temperatures and shorter steeping times to help preserve the
beneficial catechins. A temperature of 194 degrees Fahrenheit with a steeping
time of 3 minutes is better than using 212 degree, or boiling, water and a
longer steeping time of 10 minutes, according to a study published in the International
Journal of Molecular Sciences in December 2007.
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