Drinking hot tea can increase risk of esophageal cancer
Smokers and drinkers should avoid hot tea, as, according
to a study, it can increase the risk of esophageal cancer.
The cancer, which starts in the esophagus, was already
known to be linked to Brinking alcohol and smoking, but those risks are heightened by
the addition of daily cups of "burning hot" tea, scientists
discovered.
The risks to smokers also increase with high-temperature
tea drinking, said the study, which examined data on 456,155 Chinese adults
ages 30 to 79.
Lv Jun, of Peking University Health Science Centre in
China, who co-authored the study, told The Telegraph: "Boiling hot tea
will harm the cells in the oesophagus. "If the person also drinks alcohol
and smokes, then the harm caused will be more heightened."
At the start of the study, none of the participants had
cancer. Researchers followed half of the participants for at least nine years.
During the study, 1,731 people developed esophageal
tumours.
Rates of the disease are relatively high in China, where
tea drinking is common and many men smoke and drink.
Chinese people often drink tea from flasks that they carry
with them to their workplace and regularly fill up with hot water.
Very few Chinese drink traditional British tea, which less
hot than Chinese varieties as it also usually taken with cold milk.
People in Russia, Turkey and South America enjoy their tea
very hot, with many regularly drinking it at temperatures above 149 degrees
Fahrenheit (65 degrees Celsius).
Past research has shown that tea can help to protect
against tumours in the digestive tract.
But studies have also suggested that hot liquids and food
can cause "thermal injury" which can increase the risk factors
associated with cancer.
The findings have been published in the journal Annals of
Internal Medicine.

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