CLL and Green Tea

Green Tea for CLL
You can drink green tea for health benefits, but therapeutic use requires a green tea extract, taken as a supplement.

There is a lot of literature out there about CLL leukemia and green tea.  Go ahead and Google “CLL green tea” and you will come up with pages of references.  Green tea is supposed to halt the progression of CLL and, in some cases, improve symptoms.  That’s wonderful.  The good part of this is that it’s a food item (when taken as tea) and a food extract when taken as a supplement.  If you’re interested in a good quality, green tea extract, go to Life Extension.

Do I use it?  Yes and no.  I do drink green tea, practically every day. But not in therapeutic doses.  That’s because, in my case, my platelet count dropped noticeably each time I tried it at recommended levels.  Worse yet, there was no discernible benefit.  The studies I’ve looked up indicate that green tea does, in fact, affect the “aggregation” or clumping together of platelets — a good thing for people with heart disease.  While I can find no literature to back up my experience, it is what it is.  I do reserve the right to try green tea in therapeutic doses (beverage AND supplements) in the future.  But for now, I’m sticking to my already very-full and somewhat complicated program for good health.

If you want more information, you might take a look at the Mayo Clinic study in progress till March 2011.

 

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Denise

I am a grandmother, a wife, a dog owner, a writer, a web master and a poet. I was diagnosed with CLL (chronic lymphocytic leukemia) in 2001, when I was 46 years old. I've never yet had conventional treatment, but I consider it to be my personal quest to achieve "spontaneous" remission. I want to shock the doctors who will believe that this happened all on it's own, (as if the CLL were an entity onto itself). This blog site is my effort to share all the information I've gathered over the past years in my quest for good health. If you or a loved one is facing this diagnosis (I don't like to call it a disease; that sounds too serious), you need all the information you can get! I hope you find this helpful. I hope you find this hopeful. And I would love to hear from you any time.

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