From foodconsumer.org
Spearmint tea may help reduce hair growth in women
By David Liu - foodconsumer.org
Feb 20, 2007 - 4:33:02 PM
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Growing too much hair in wrong places can be embarrassing.
But a new Turkish study found something as simple as drinking spearmint tea
could be used to get the problem under control.
Researchers found that drinking the tea twice a day reduced
levels of male sex hormones, which can cause excessive hair growth (hirsutism)
on the stomach, breasts and face in women.
Traditional therapies for hirsutism aim to reduce these
hormones including androgen to slow or completely wipe out the ever-growing
hair in women who are not supposed to have as much hair as men.
The researchers said in their report populated in
Phytotherapy Research that spearmint could be a good alternative to treat
excessive hair growth in women with mild symptoms.
Hirsutism is rarely caused by a serious condition, nor does it
cause any illness other than distress or embarrassment.
An exception is that this condition can be
caused by an underlying medical disorder such as polycystic ovary syndrome.
Male hormones are not just found in men.
All women produce low levels of the male sex
or androgen hormones.
Hirsutism occurs
when the male hormones including testosterone are over produced in women.
The excessive production of male hormones in women leads to
excessive hair growth.
It has been reported, according to the researchers, that
extracts of spearmint plant (Mentha spicata Labiatae) is used to reduce libido
in men residing in a town called Isparta in southwest Turkey.
The current finding explains why extracts of
spearmint reduces libido in men.
In the current study, 21 women wit hirsutism, 12 of whom had
polycystic ovary syndrome were assigned a cup of spearmint tea twice a day for
five days in the follicular phase of their menstrual cycle.
The tea was prepared by keeping one heaped teaspoon (5g) of
dried leaves in 250 ml boiling water for 5 to 10 minutes.
The researchers found the women experienced a decrease in
the free form of testosterone in the blood and an increase in several female hormones
including follicle-stimulating hormone.
Needlessness, the total level of testosterone including
active and inactive forms did not change, suggesting that spearmint tea
inactivate the male hormones rather than inhibit their production.
The current therapies for hirsutism suppress androgen
production or prevent the body from responding to androgen.
The researchers cautioned that more studies are needed to
confirm the effect of spearmint on hirsutism.