That headline is clickbait-style and intentionally cut off (“causes in…”) to make you curious. Let’s separate fact from hype.
🍃 Guava leaf tea — what it actually is
Guava leaves are sometimes brewed as tea in traditional medicine systems.
🫖 What research actually suggests
Some studies (mostly small or lab-based) suggest guava leaf tea may:
- Help reduce blood sugar spikes after meals
- Have mild antibacterial properties
- Support digestion (may reduce diarrhea in some cases)
- Contain antioxidants
⚠️ What it does NOT mean
There is no solid medical evidence that guava leaf tea:
- “Detoxes” organs
- Cures diseases
- Replaces diabetes or infection medications
- Has dramatic guaranteed effects in humans
🧪 Possible side effects (what doctors would actually warn about)
In some people, it may:
- Lower blood sugar too much if combined with diabetes medication
- Cause mild stomach upset
- Interact with certain medications
So the “doctors reveal it causes…” part is likely referring to blood sugar changes or digestive effects, not something mysterious or dangerous in most healthy people.
💡 Bottom line
Guava leaf tea is:
- Potentially helpful in small, supportive ways
- Not a cure or “miracle drink”
- Something to use cautiously if you’re on medication
If you want, I can tell you which herbal teas actually have strong scientific backing vs which ones are mostly hype—there’s a big difference.