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Published in: International Urology and Nephrology 1/2018

01-01-2018 | Urology - Original Paper

Does green tea consumption increase urinary oxalate excretion? Results of a prospective trial in healthy men

Authors: Kang Chen, Dong Chen, Chuangxin Lan, Xiongfa Liang, Tao Zeng, Jian Huang, Xiaolu Duan, Zhenzhen Kong, Shujue Li, Hans-Göran Tiselius, Alberto Gurioli, Xiaogang Lu, Guohua Zeng, Wenqi Wu

Published in: International Urology and Nephrology | Issue 1/2018

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Abstract

Objective

To investigate the impact of green tea on urinary oxalate excretion in healthy male volunteers.

Materials and methods

The oxalate concentrations after different brewing times (2–60 min) of different qualities (2–8 g) of green tea were measured in in vitro experiment. In in vivo experiment, the effects on urine composition were assessed in 12 healthy men with an age of 24–29 years. Each subject was requested to collect two 24-h urine samples under normal dietary conditions. Green tea prepared from tea bags containing 2 g of tea leafs was consumed by the subjects for 7 consecutive days, and 24-h urine samples were collected and analyzed on days 6 and 7. After 3-week washout interval, all subjects consumed green tea containing 4 g of leaf tea for another 7 consecutive days. Two 24-h urine samples were collected on the last 2 days. Urine volume, pH, calcium, magnesium, sodium, phosphate, potassium, chloride, citrate, oxalate, urate and creatinine were measured.

Results

In the in vitro experiments, oxalate in solution increased with brewing time (p < 0.05) and tea quality (p < 0.05). In the in vivo experiment, 24-h urinary oxalate increased significantly (0.24 ± 0.09 mmol to 0.32 ± 0.13 mmol, p = 0.045) when tea was prepared from 2-g bags of green leaf tea. Consumption of green tea containing 4 g of leaf tea resulted in 24-h urinary oxalate increase (0.25 ± 0.25 mmol to 0.34 ± 0.22 mmol, p = 0.041).

Conclusions

In vitro studies showed that there was a gradual increase in solution concentrations of oxalate that was associated with increased brewing time and increased quality of green tea. Studies in normal men showed that green tea consumption was associated with increased urinary exertion of oxalate.
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Metadata
Title
Does green tea consumption increase urinary oxalate excretion? Results of a prospective trial in healthy men
Authors
Kang Chen
Dong Chen
Chuangxin Lan
Xiongfa Liang
Tao Zeng
Jian Huang
Xiaolu Duan
Zhenzhen Kong
Shujue Li
Hans-Göran Tiselius
Alberto Gurioli
Xiaogang Lu
Guohua Zeng
Wenqi Wu
Publication date
01-01-2018
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
International Urology and Nephrology / Issue 1/2018
Print ISSN: 0301-1623
Electronic ISSN: 1573-2584
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11255-017-1720-x

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