Here's an article from WebMD for your consideration.
Notice in the experiment that green tea extract was added to their home brewed tea, it wasn't merely home tea alone.
Whether you believe that green helps weight loss or not, it's an excellent phytonutrient source!
Green tea ingredient may promote healthy weight loss
By Jennifer Warner
WebMD Medical News
Reviewed By Michael W. Smith, MD
Jan.
26, 2005 -- Need another healthy reason to drink green tea? Aside from
fighting heart disease, cancer, and other diseases, a new study shows
that drinking green tea may also fight fat.
The
study showed that people who drank a bottle of tea fortified with green
tea extract every day for three months lost more body fat than those
who drank a bottle of regular oolong tea.
Researchers
say the results indicate that substances found in green tea known as
catechins may trigger weight loss by stimulating the body to burn
calories and decreasing body fat.
The findings appear in the January issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
Green Tea: Fat Fighter?
Black tea, oolong tea, and green tea come from the same Camellia sinensis plant. But unlike the other two varieties, green tea leaves are not fermented before steaming and drying.
Most
teas contain large amounts of polyphenols, which are plant-based
substances that have been shown to have antioxidant, anticancer, and
antiviral properties.
However, green tea
is particularly rich in a type of polyphenols called catechins. These
substances have also been shown to have anti-inflammatory and
anticancer properties, but recent research in animals show that
catechins may also affect body fat accumulation and cholesterol levels.
In this study, researchers looked at the
effects of catechins on body fat reduction and weight loss in a group
of 35 Japanese men. The men had similar weights based on their BMI
(body mass index, an indicator of body fat) and waist sizes.
The
men were divided into two groups. For three months, the first group
drank a bottle of oolong tea fortified with green tea extract
containing 690 milligrams of catechins, and the other group drank a
bottle of oolong tea with 22 milligrams of catechins.
During
this time, the men ate identical breakfasts and dinners and were
instructed to control their calorie and fat intake at all times so that
overall total diets were similar.
After
three months, the study showed that the men who drank the green tea
extract lost more weight (5.3 pounds vs. 2.9 pounds) and experienced a
significantly greater decrease in BMI, waist size, and total body fat.
In addition, LDL "bad" cholesterol went down in the men who drank the green tea extract.
The
catechin content varies by amount of green tea used and steeping time.
But general recommendations, based on previous studies on the benefits
of green tea, are at least 4 cups a day. Green tea extract supplements
are also available.
Researchers say the
results indicate that catechins in green tea not only help burn
calories and lower LDL cholesterol but may also be able to mildly
reduce body fat.
"These results suggest
that catechins contribute to the prevention of and improvement in
various lifestyle-related diseases, particularly obesity," write
researcher Tomonori Nagao of Health Care Products Research Laboratories
in Tokyo, and colleagues.
SOURCE: Nagao, T. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, January 2005; vol 81: 122-129.