Treatment of prostate and Green Tea – An Assessment

For too long the benefits of green tea and its components have been subject of scrutiny by investigators in the medical fraternity.
Many studies have indicated that green tea and its components are helpful in providing treatment for various ailments including prostate cancer and benign prostatic hypertrophy (BPH).
The phytochemicals, chemicals that are biologically active but not nutritive antioxidants in green tea work on growth factors and proteins and act as prostate medicine to restrict the growth of benign and malignant tumors as well.
For men, prostate cancer is the second most common type of cancer after skin cancer. Benign enlargement of the prostate gland, in its worst form, causes several problems with urination and libido. Prostate cancer is reigns since it separated from its origin to distant parts of the body. Moreover, there is no guarantee when a benign condition takes a turn for the worst and develop premalignant and ultimately malignancy.
The results indicate that antioxidants in green tea help in the caspase-mediated cell death, a process known in medical circles as apoptosis. It is a natural process of cell death in which the cell uses specialized cellular machinery to kill himself. This is basically a mechanism of cell suicide that controls their numbers and eliminates cells that threaten survival. In simple language means that it is the body’s natural process of survival of the fittest cells.
There have been numerous other studies indicating positive effects of green tea in other cancers such as breast cancer. At the same time the FDA has restricted a company from green tea to use advertising the advantages of green tea in reducing risk of prostate cancer and breast cancer.
Green tea is a harmless drink has no known side effects in reasonable quantities. If you can provide some advantages, and there seems no harm in including your drink green tea regularly.
He survived 2 and a half years thanks to participation in clinical trials and the care he received at Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa. Whenever I speak about him, I always preface my story with “he was not a smoker” as though smoking would somehow mean that he deserved his illness. Such is the stigma of lung cancer