Effect of Green Tea Phytochemicals on Mood and Cognition.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to summarize the acute psychoactive effects of EGCG, along with caffeine and L-theanine, on mood and cognitive performance based on existing human intervention studies.
Results Summary
The study found no conclusive evidence regarding the effects of EGCG due to limited intervention studies. Previous research on caffeine and L-theanine showed clear benefits, but EGCG's impact remained undetermined.
Population
Human intervention studies (general population, specifics not detailed).
Effective Dosage
Not specified for EGCG.
Duration
Not specified for EGCG.
Interactions
None mentioned.
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
caffeine | increase | demanding long-duration cognitive tasks | human participants | - | mainly improve performance | #1 |
caffeine | increase | self-reported alertness, arousal, and vigor | human participants | - | improve | #2 |
caffeine | increase | - | human participants | low doses of 40 mg | Significant effects already occurred | #3 |
L-theanine | increase | self-reported relaxation, tension, and calmness | human participants | starting at 200 mg | improved | #4 |
L-theanine and caffeine combined | increase | attention-switching tasks and alertness | human participants | - | improve performance | #5 |
L-theanine and caffeine combined | increase | performance in attention-switching tasks and alertness | human participants | - | to a lesser extent than caffeine alone | #6 |
EGCG | no change | - | human participants | - | No conclusive evidence relating to effects | #7 |
L-theanine and caffeine | increase | sustained attention, memory, and suppression of distraction | human participants | - | have clear beneficial effects | #8 |
L-theanine | decrease | caffeine induced arousal | human participants | - | lead to relaxation by reducing | #9 |
BACKGROUND: Green tea is traditionally known to induce mental clarity, cognitive function, physical activation and relaxation. Recently, a special green tea, matcha tea, is rapidly gaining popularity throughout the world and is frequently referred to as a mood- and brain food. Matcha tea consumption leads to much higher intake of green tea phytochemicals compared to regular green tea. Previous research on tea constituents caffeine, L-theanine, and epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) repeatedly demonstrated benefits on mood and cognitive performance. These effects were observed when these phytochemicals were consumed separately and in combination. METHODS: A review was conducted on 49 human intervention studies to summarize the research on acute psychoactive effects of caffeine, L-theanine, and EGCG on different dimensions of mood and cognitive performance. CONCLUSION: Caffeine was found to mainly improve performance on demanding long-duration cognitive tasks and self-reported alertness, arousal, and vigor. Significant effects already occurred at low doses of 40 mg. L-theanine alone improved self-reported relaxation, tension, and calmness starting at 200 mg. L-theanine and caffeine combined were found to particularly improve performance in attention-switching tasks and alertness, but to a lesser extent than caffeine alone. No conclusive evidence relating to effects induced by EGCG could be given since the amount of intervention studies was limited. These studies provided reliable evidence showing that L-theanine and caffeine have clear beneficial effects on sustained attention, memory, and suppression of distraction. Moreover, L-theanine was found to lead to relaxation by reducing caffeine induced arousal.