逍遥法外电影大尺度未删减,伊人天堂网,蜜桃臀av在线,综合网天天,老炮儿电影未删减完整版下载,国内久久精品视频,风花电影在线观看完整版

CHINA> Regional
Wanglaoji is safe to drink, say experts
By Liang Qiwen (China Daily)
Updated: 2009-05-13 09:29

GUANGZHOU: Drinking Wanglaoji, a kind of herbal tea, is not harmful to the health, medical experts in Guangdong province said Tuesday.

"Wanglaoji and its ingredients are absolutely safe for human consumption," Zhang Junxiu, deputy director of the food association of Guangdong province, said Tuesday. Wanglaoji, one of the most popular drinks in the country, contains various kinds of herbs, including Xiakucao (Prunella vulgaris L).

Recently, a man in Zhejiang province, who had been drinking the herbal tea for years, developed a gastric ulcer, which his doctor blamed on Xiakucao, the key ingredient in the herbal tea.

Yan Weixing, deputy director of nutrition and food safety institute of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), said on Monday that the Ministry of Health had released a list of edible Chinese medicines.

The list, which includes 87 different Chinese medicines, does not mention Xiakucao.

"Millions of people in China and abroad drink Wanglaoji, but none of them have had any problems," Zhang said.

"In April 2005, the Ministry of Health had agreed with producers to include Xiakucao in their list of edible additives," Zhang said.

Reading out from a scientific book in front of the media Tuesday, Zhang said Xiakucao was "identified as a kind of wild vegetable by the state's government in 1991".

"We will not change the formula," he said.

Guangdong herbal tea, known as Liang Cha in China, is listed as a national level non-material cultural heritage in the country.

Changing the formula will ruin Guangdong's history and culture, Zhang said.