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Spearmint Tea May Help Treat Excess Body Hair
Chava discovered this article on the web, which can be found on many websites including www.reuters.com and www.bbc.com
Spearmint Tea May Help Treat Excess Body Hair
Fri Feb 23, 2007 12:31pm EST
NEW YORK - A few mugs of spearmint tea could help women combat excess facial and
body hair, Turkish researchers report.
Women with excess body hair, a condition known as hirsutism, who drank two cups
of the herbal tea a day for five days showed significant reductions
in their levels of free testosterone, Dr. Mehmet Numan Tamer and
colleagues from Suleyman Demirel University in Isparta report.
Typical treatments for hirsutism target excess levels of male hormones, and
include oral contraceptives to prevent the production of these
hormones or drug treatment to block the body's response to them,
Tamer and his team point out in the journal Phytotherapy Research.
The researchers previously noted that drinking peppermint tea seemed to
lower the libido in some men, which prompted them to investigate
spearmint as an anti-hirsutism treatment. Hirsutism is characterized
by excessive hair growth on the face, breasts and belly, and affects
about 5 percent of women. It is thought to be related to the body's
level of androgens (male hormones).
The researchers had 21 women with hirsutism drink a tea prepared from a
heaping teaspoon of dried spearmint leaves twice daily. Twelve of the
women had polycystic ovary syndrome, while the rest had hirsutism
with known cause.
After five days, the women's levels of free testosterone (the biologically
active form) declined, although their total testosterone level stayed
the same. Women's levels of luteinizing hormone, follicle stimulating
hormone, and estrogen rose, while their triglyceride levels dropped
significantly.
Women with high male hormone levels may also have high levels of triglycerides,
insulin resistance, and obesity, the researchers note.
Spearmint can be an alternative to antiandrogenic treatment for mild hirsutism.
However, further studies are needed for testing the reliability and
availability of spearmint as a drug for hirsutism," the
researchers conclude.
SOURCE: Phytotherapy Research, online February 20, 2007.
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