08/30/2018 / By Michelle Simmons
Drinking black tea has been known to provide mental health benefits, but what about inhaling its aroma? Research has found that inhaling the aroma of black tea may reduce stress levels before and after a mentally stressful event. In the study, which was published in the Journal of Physiological Anthropology, the relieving effects of two kinds of black tea (Assam and Darjeeling) aromas on physical and psychological stress were evaluated.
A team of researchers at the University of Shizuoka, Chubu University, Mitsui Norin Co., Ltd, and Tokai University in Japan recruited 18 healthy people aged between 20 and 21 years to participate in the study. The research team instructed the participants to not consume anything except water for three hours before the start of every trial.
Then, the team induced stress in the participants using a psycho-diagnostic test called Uchida-Kraepelin test. This test involves mathematical problems to be solved within 30 minutes, split into two 15-minute sessions. In between sessions, the participants were tasked to inhale either black tea aroma or be exposed to warm water for one minute.
After these, the research team used levels of salivary chromogranin-A (CgA), an acidic protein produced in response to stress, as a stress marker to identify the effect of inhaling black tea aroma in the participants.
Based on the results, participants who inhaled black tea aroma exhibited lower salivary CgA concentration levels after 30 minutes of mentally stressful tasks, in comparison to those who were exposed only to warm water.
In addition, both black teas caused similar effects, even though Darjeeling tea aroma has a higher concentration of anti-stress components, such as hexanal, hexanol, and linalool, compared to Assam black tea. Hexanal and hexanol have been previously reported to decrease mental stress response in mice, while linalool possesses sedative effects.
“The above results indicated that inhaling black tea aroma may diminish stress levels caused by arithmetic mental stress tasks, and Darjeeling tea aroma tended to improve (the) mood before mental stress load,” wrote the research team.
Black tea may be the most common among the three main varieties of tea, including green and oolong. Although all teas come from the same plant, each variety is processed differently. The evergreen shoots of black tea are firstly picked, then withered, rolled, fermented, and dried.
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Tagged Under: alternative medicine, black tea, black tea aroma, depression, food as medicine, good food, good health, good medicine, healing, herbal medicine, Herbs, mental health, natural cures, natural healing, natural medicine, natural remedies, stress, stress management, stress reduction