Groton Chiropractor favors Black Tea

Black tea and calcium. Odd combination! Usually honey and tea, sugar and tea, cream and tea…but calcium and tea? Shoreline Medical Services/ Hutter Chiropractic Office likes this new combination for the potential protection of bone. (Chiropractors and their osteoporotic patients everywhere can appreciate that!) Plus, black tea is helpful for many other conditions.

A new article in the Journal of Osteoporosis just came across the desk here at Shoreline Medical Services/ Hutter Chiropractic Office. It touts the benefit of black tea extract as an everyday, simple treatment for osteoporosis. The black tea extract seems a likely adjunct therapy for calcium supplements in the early stage of menopausal bone changes. (1) So have some tea with a dollop of your favorite taste enhancer. It’s a good thing for you!

Black tea has been enjoyed for years. Its positive potential uses include mental alertness improvement and learning, memory and information processing. Headache treatment, low blood pressure, heart disease and certain cancers (breast, ovarian, lunch, colon, stomach) prevention and even for kidney stone and tooth decay prevention are among the conditions people turn to black tea for more than its taste! (2)

 

Black teas’ 2% to 4% caffeine and antioxidant content make it a healthy drink that your Groton chiropractor would approve for most patients. We look forward to seeing you at your next Groton chiropractic appointment and hearing about your preferred black tea combination...and treating any back pain or neck pain you may have! Contact Shoreline Medical Services/ Hutter Chiropractic Office now.

« View All Nutrition Articles
"This information and website content is not intended to diagnose, guarantee results, or recommend specific treatment or activity. It is designed to educate and inform only. Please consult your physician for a thorough examination leading to a diagnosis and well-planned treatment strategy. See more details on the DISCLAIMER page. Content is reviewed by Dr. James M. Cox I."