Safe Uses of Chinese Diet Teas
May 17, 2009 by admin
Filed under Slimming Herbal Teas
Going on a diet? A Chinese diet using tea may be the answer. Manufacturers are beginning to name their own weight loss products under the slogan “Chinese diet tea,” and distribute them to retail stores. Tea is a light calorie diet, 4 grams, giving a boost to the need for production. Caffeine is found in tea, jump starts your energy levels while melting off calories. Another aid in weight loss, polyphenols, will move fats through your body for proper digestion, giving Chinese diet tea a thumb’s up.
There are many names associated with Chinese diet tea: super dieter’s tea, slimming tea, weight loss tea, and fasting tea. These tea names all sell a weight loss solution through their products. A known truth about these tea products, they are laxative based giving the drinker a disorder of stomach cramps, vomiting, nausea, chronic constipation, diarrhea, constipation, or fainting. If there is too much consumption of this laxative, death is likely.
Substances are also found in laxative teas and dietary supplements and cause stressed concerns from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The substances causing concerns are as follows: rhubarb root, castor oil, aloe, cascara, senna, and buckthorn. Once these substances were discovered to be a constipation reliever and bowel symptoms reliever, they have continued use, getting access from plants. They are deemed effective for such purposes with occasional use. They should only be used under caution by their package directions.
Chinese diet teas, or their labeled versions, can be misused when the consumer intakes them frequently with an assumption that calorie absorption is halted. The small intestines absorb the calories, leaving the laxative-induced diarrhea out of topic for reduced calorie absorption, suggesting that research on this information is true. The colon area is the culprit of reducing calorie intake.
Chinese diet teas should not be taken for granted, as they can cause both long and short conditions. Reactions can occur by over-using the tea beyond product recommendations. If the Chinese diet teas are over consumed, adverse reactions could occur.
After an overdose consumption of Chinese diet teas through an initial period, general symptoms are likely to occur for extended periods: diarrhea, stomach cramps, nausea, and vomiting. Similar to any drug, the laxatives can cause dependency, followed by post symptoms of abdominal pain, constipation, and chronic diarrhea. Disorders occurring through severe overdose will cause electrolyte disorders fainting, and dehydration. These conditions are more prone to cause disruption in those with weaken immune systems from harsh dieting.
Due to common severe reactions to the Chinese green tea diet, the FDA is stepping in to force these manufacturers to attach stimulant laxatives to the package labels. For any products containing a Chinese diet tea, primary attention to the recommendations is important, while focusing on the warning labels.
