Dr. Russell Blaylock, M.D.
Dr. Russell Blaylock, author of The Blaylock Wellness Report newsletter, is a nationally recognized board-certified neurosurgeon, health practitioner, author, and lecturer. He attended the Louisiana State University School of Medicine and completed his internship and neurological residency at the Medical University of South Carolina. For 26 years, practiced neurosurgery in addition to having a nutritional practice. He recently retired from his neurosurgical duties to devote his full attention to nutritional research. Dr. Blaylock has authored four books, Excitotoxins: The Taste That Kills, Health and Nutrition Secrets That Can Save Your Life, Natural Strategies for Cancer Patients, and his most recent work, Cellular and Molecular Biology of Autism Spectrum Disorders. Find out what others are saying about Dr. Blaylock by clicking here.
Tags: white tea | fluoride | theaflavins | cancer
OPINION

White Tea Better Than Others

Russell Blaylock, M.D. By Wednesday, 21 December 2016 03:58 PM EST Current | Bio | Archive

Studies indicate that white tea has higher antioxidant levels than either green or black tea. All three teas come from the same plant — the difference is in the harvesting and preparation.

White tea is taken during the earliest stage of tea harvesting, while black tea is picked in the last stages, and the green variety is harvested at some point in the middle.

Black tea is cooked to make it black. That process creates a group of compounds called theaflavins, which have anticancer effects.

But the real advantage to white tea — besides its higher antioxidant content — is that it contains the lowest levels of fluoride of any tea.

Black tea has the highest amount and green tea is somewhere in between.

Fluoride in tea comes from the soil and is sucked up by the plant and concentrated in the leaves. Some teas have very high levels of fluoride — as much as 20 to 30 parts per million.

One safe way to remove fluoride is to add calcium carbonate to your cup of tea. This binds the fluoride and greatly reduces its toxicity.

If tea growers would add lime to the soil, that would prevent the plant’s roots from absorbing fluoride.
 

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Dr-Blaylock
White tea is taken during the earliest stage of tea harvesting, while black tea is picked in the last stages, and the green variety is harvested at some point in the middle.
white tea, fluoride, theaflavins, cancer
200
2016-58-21
Wednesday, 21 December 2016 03:58 PM
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