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Green Tea

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Why it matters

Green tea can improve overall dietary polyphenol quality while offering mild cardiometabolic and anti-inflammatory benefits. For stiffness, the mechanistic rationale is strong, but clinical evidence is still modest.

Details

Green tea is made from unfermented leaves of Camellia sinensis and naturally provides catechins, especially EGCG, plus smaller amounts of caffeine and L-theanine. These compounds may influence inflammatory signaling, oxidative stress, and cartilage-degrading pathways relevant to joint symptoms. Direct human evidence for stiffness is limited, but one randomized clinical trial in knee osteoarthritis found that green tea extract used alongside diclofenac improved pain and physical function more than diclofenac alone (Hashempur et al., 2018). Reviews of green tea and joint health remain encouraging but mostly rely on small human studies and preclinical data (Luk et al., 2020). In everyday use, brewed green tea is best positioned as a supportive habit rather than a primary therapeutic food.

Nutritional List

Catechins, EGCG, L-Theanine, Caffeine, Flavonoids

Potential Stiffness Target

Low-grade inflammation, knee discomfort, stiffness with metabolic strain

Practical Intake

Drink 1-3 cups of brewed green tea daily, preferably between meals if tolerated. Start with 1 cup if you are caffeine-sensitive, and avoid loading concentrated extracts; matcha is more concentrated and may not be the best starting point.

Evidence Strength

Weak

Citation

Hashempur et al., 2018; Luk et al., 2020; NCCIH, 2025

Serving Size

1 cup brewed tea, 1-3 times/day.

Contraindications

Brewed tea is generally safe for most adults, but caffeine may worsen insomnia, palpitations, anxiety, reflux, or tremor. Separate tea from iron supplements or iron-rich meals if iron deficiency is a concern. Avoid high-dose green tea extracts if you have liver disease or take medicines with known green tea interactions.

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