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THE HEALTH BENEFITS OF WINE
We
begin with a review of some of the published studies regarding the
health benefits from wine and other alcoholic beverages. The following
is taken mostly from the writings of Elisabeth Holmgren, director of the
Department of Research and Education at the Wine Institute. Although she
represents the wine industry, her writings seem to be relatively even
handed. Nothing that follows is meant to obscure the fact that prolonged
excessive alcohol consumption is detrimental to one’s health. Joel’s
comments are in brackets [JM].
Wine’s Role in the “French
Paradox” Receives Confirmation
A new study by original “French Paradox” researcher Serge Renaud
offers more evidence that moderate wine consumption is associated with a
significant reduction in all-cause mortality, cardiovascular disease and
cancer among men. The findings (Epidemiology,
March, 1998) were based on a large cohort study [JM - cohort studies are
epidemiological studies that use individuals having a statistical
element in common, such as race, gender, age, etc., as opposed to a
random selection of individuals. As such, the results cannot always be
projected to the population as a whole.] of middle aged men in eastern
France. Daily, moderate drinkers who consumed mostly wine were compared
to non-drinkers and heavy drinkers.
Renaud and colleagues from the University of Bordeaux found that
moderate wine consumption (2-3 glasses a day) was associated with a 30%
reduction in the death rate from all causes; a 35% percent reduction in
death rates from cardiovascular disease; and an 18-24% reduction in
death rates from cancer. “The results of the present study,” the
researchers write, “appear to confirm the speculation that the so-called
French Paradox is due, at least in part, to the regular consumption of
wine. [JM - The French Paradox, of 60 minutes fame, is the observation
that, although the French and Americans have similar high fat diets, the
French have a much lower incidence of cardiovascular disease.
Speculation was that this is due to the protective effects of wine
consumption, since the French drink much more wine than we do. Of
course, there are many other possible explanations.]
How Wine Works: Emerging
Research on Mealtime Alcohol Consumption
It is known that alcohol consumption reduces the risk of coronary
heart disease and overall mortality. [JM - This statement is a bit
strong. Statistical studies show a relationship between two variables
(here, moderate alcohol consumption and reduced incidence of heart
disease), but they do not establish a cause and effect relationship -
“proof” that one causes the other. The recent wealth of data should give
us more confidence in a cause and effect relationship, but we are not
nearly to the point of “proof.” It took decades and hundreds of studies
before the Surgeon General was willing to declare that smoking
causes cancer.] But
it has been less clear just how alcohol works to protect the body
against heart disease and death.
A new study from researchers at the University Hospital of Zurich,
Switzerland. identifies a mechanism for how alcohol favorably effects
arterial muscle cells. According to Wilhelm Vetter, M.D., and
colleagues, alcohol, when consumed around mealtime, reduces the
proliferation of smooth muscle cells (SMC) within the arteries. SMC
growth is a key element in the develop-ment of atherosclerosis, which
commonly leads to heart attacks and strokes.
The study found that the ingestion of alcohol. equivalent to two
glasses of wine or three beers, with a high-fat meal resulted in a 20%
decrease in the growth of arterial muscle cells. Researchers suggest
these results could have a profound effect on heart disease “considering
the amount of time humans spend in the postprandial state during their
lifetimes.”
Other mechanisms may be at work. Several researchers have suggested
that the apparent health benefits of wine ingested at mealtime may be
due to the ability of alcohol and other phenolic compounds in wine to
counter adverse effects of fatty foods during the critical digestive
phase. Renaud has written of the positive effect of wine during meals on
platelet aggregation , finding that wine “consumed with meals is
absorbed more slowly, and thus has a prolonged effect on blood platelets
at a time when they are under the influence of alimentary lipids known
to increase their reactivity.”
An Israeli study by Fuhrman et al, published in the American Journal
of Clinical Nutrition, found that drinking red wine with meals resulted
in a 20% reduction in the LDL (“bad”) cholesterol oxidation. A Dutch
study, published in the British Medical Journal, found that alcohol
consumed with a meal may prevent blood clotting triggered by fat.
Women Wine Drinkers Have
Fewer Kidney Stones
A new study from Harvard University researcher Gary Curhan and
colleagues, using more than 81,000 women participants drawn from the
Nurses’ Health Study, found that an increase in fluid intake
significantly reduces risk for kidney stones and that risk reduction was
greatest for wine compared with other beverages. Out of 17 beverages,
including tea, coffee, fruit juices, milk and water, wine was associated
with the highest reduction in risk - 59%.
Researchers noted: “Intakes of caffeinated and decaffeinated coffee,
tea and wine were associated with decreased risk.” Curhan and colleagues
reported similar results for men and kidney stones in 1996. Wine
consumption was associated with highest risk reduction - 39%.
Moderate wine consumption
cuts stroke risk
The moderate consumption of wine (but not beer or spirits) is
associated with a reduced risk of stroke, according to a new report. The
authors believe wine’s protective effects may be linked to
disease-fighting compounds other than alcohol. “Intake of wine is
associated with lower risk of stroke,” concludes a 16-year Danish study
led by Dr. Thomas Truelsen of Copen-hagen University Hospital (Journal
of the American Heart Association, December, 1998).
Previous studies have suggested that moderate wine consumption (a
glass a day, for example) may provide cardiovascular benefit. This
phenomena is exemplified by what the Danish team call the ‘French
paradox’ - “a low incidence of cardiovascular disease in the
(wine-drinking) French population despite an unfavorable exposure to
known cardiovascular factors (such as smoking).” Investigating further,
the authors tracked the stroke incidence of over 13,300 Danes for 16
years.
They report that, compared with abstainers, individuals who said they
drank wine on a monthly, weekly, or daily basis had a 16%, 34%, and 32%
reduced risk of stroke, respectively. The researchers found “no
association between intake of beer or spirits on risk of stroke.”
These findings suggest that other compounds in wine besides alcohol
may have a positive impact on cardiovascular health. “Wine contains
flavonoids and tannins,” the authors explain, “which are components
presumed to prevent cardiovascular disease.” They speculate that
drinking patterns specific to wine lovers may also influence
cardiovascular health. Wine is more commonly consumed at mealtimes than
either beer or hard liquor, and “these differences in ‘timing’ may be
important,” according to the researchers. One recent study concluded
that mealtime alcohol consumption reduced unhealthy alterations in blood
composition that can occur after eating.
In a press release, the American Heart Association “does not
recommend that individuals start drinking to reduce their risk of heart
disease and stroke.” Experts point out that excessive drinking can
actually raise the likelihood of cardiovascular disease, heart attack,
and stroke.
Regular, Moderate Alcohol Consumption Protects Against Atherosclerosis
New Data from the Bruneck Study (Italy) was reported by Australian
and Italian researchers in the May 1998 issue of Stroke. They conclude
that light to moderate alcohol consumers faced a lower risk of
atherosclerosis (early atherogenesis) than either abstainers or heavy
drinkers. Arteriosclerosis, the gradual build-up of fatty deposits in
the arteries, is the leading contributor to coronary heart disease and
fatal heart attacks.
Notably, alcohol consumption during meals offered advantages.
“Alcohol ingestion during meals tended to offer more protection,
probably due to a delayed absorption and prolonged mode of action at a
time when platelet reactivity increases under the influence of
alimentary lipids,” explained the researchers, led by Innsbruck
University’s Stefan Kiechl, M.D.
Cohort Studies From Around
the World Link Moderation to Longevity
In recent years dozens of cohort studies from all over the world have
associated moderate alcohol consumption with reduced risk for
cardiovascular disease, decreased overall mortality rates and other
potentially improved health conditions. This growing worldwide research
consensus has resulted in certain changes in the world view of alcohol
during just the last few years. In a significant departure form the
past, major public health organizations and governments around the world
now officially recognize that moderation can be part of a healthful diet
for those who choose to drink. The World Health Organization, the United
States government, the United Kingdom’s government and the American
Heart Association are among the health policy leaders that recently have
issued balanced alcohol statements expressing caution in terms of
alcohol abuse, but highlighting scientific findings that associate
cardiovascular benefits with moderate consumption.
In varying degrees, wine, beer and spirits have been shown to confer
certain health advantages for those who consume in moderation. The most
recent review study on the subject of alcohol and longevity was by
esteemed British epidemiologist Richard Doll, M.D. In the British
Medical Journal, Doll concluded, “The consumption of small and moderate
amounts of alcohol reduces mortality from vascular disease by about a
third.” In his review, Doll looked over three dozen studies published
over the last decade. We will discuss some of these cohort studies from
around the world which are highlighted in the table below.
Alcohol and Wine’s Effects on Mortality - Findings From Around the World
|
United
States |
Europe |
Asia/Australia |
|
Framingham Heart Study (MA) |
Seven
Countries Study |
Japanese Physicians |
|
Kaiser
Permanente (CA) |
British Regional Heart Study |
Busselton Study (Austral) |
|
Nurses
Health Study (MA) |
British Doctors Study |
Dubbo
Study (Austral) |
|
Physicians Health Study (MA) |
Copenhagen City Heart Study |
New
Zealand Cohort |
|
Health
Professionals (MA) |
MONICA
(WHO) |
Shanghai China Cohort |
|
NHANES
(USA) |
Italian Rural Cohorts Study |
|
|
Honolulu Heart Study (HI) |
|
|
Well-Established Cardiovascular Benefits of Moderation
As early as 1980, the Honolulu Heart Study reported that moderate
alcohol consumption was associated with a 50% reduction in the rate of
coronary heart disease. Dozens of studies around the world have since
confirmed this for both men and women. In the 1990’s, large-scale
studies including the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study (over 44,000
men) and the Nurses’ Health Study of over 85,000 women have convincingly
demonstrated reduced risks for heart disease. The data are so clear on
this issue that leading Harvard researchers included moderate alcohol
consumption as one of the best ways to cut heart attack risk. In 1996,
they credited “one or two drinks of beer, wine, or liquor per day” to “a
reduction in risk of 20-40%.
The latest research has also found associations between moderation
and other cardiovascular diseases. In early 1997, data was published
showing that moderate alcohol con-sumers reduced their risk for stroke,
angina pectoris (a painful precursor of heart attacks) and for
peripheral artery disease, a condition in which internal blood clots
form in the extremities.
It was Dr. Arthur Klatsky of Kaiser Permanente Hospital in California
who first noted that the association between consumption and heart
disease resembled a “U” with moderate con-sumers at the lowest risk in
the curve, and abstainers and abusers at higher risk. This U-shaped
relationship between alcohol intake and disease continues to be seen for
both cardiovascular and overall mortality studies. Moderate consumption
appears to be most advantageous.
Moderation and Reduced
All-Cause Mortality
Some of the most respected population studies find that consuming
wine, beer or spirits in moderation has been associated with an
increased life expectancy. Researchers report that although substantial
decreases in mortality risk for moderate drinkers can be attributed to
reduced risk of heart disease, this factor alone does not entirely
account for their favorable mortality profile. Moderate drinkers
compared to abstainers, both male and female, appear to be at lower risk
for all causes of death, including cancer and other chronic diseases,
while heavy drinkers increase their mortality risk. This U-shaped
relationship was seen in the Honolulu Heart study and subsequently in an
American Cancer Society Study which found that subjects who consumed
moderate amounts of alcohol (less than 3 drinks per day) were less
likely to die during the research period than either abstainers or heavy
drinkers. Several studies with similar findings have led the American
Heart Association to state in 1996, “The lowest mortality occurs in
those who consume one or two drinks per day.”
A 13-year follow-up of a British Physician’s Study found that the
overall death rate for 12,000 male doctors in middle or old age who had
an average of one to two drinks per day of wine, beer, or spirits was at
least 1/6 lower than that for abstainers. Investigators for the Danish
government’s Copenhagen City Heart Study similarly analyzed 10-12 years
of follow up data on 7234 women and 6051 men aged 30 to 79. A U-shaped
curve emerged: consumers of 1-6 drinks per week had the lowest risk for
all causes of mortality. A 1997 Shanghai Cohort Study, the first major
Chinese study, examined 18,000 men in Shanghai and found a 19% lower
mortality rate for all causes in moderate drinkers.
The Nurses’ Health Study (1995) found a reduced overall mortality
rate for light-to-moderate drinkers among 85,000 women. They concluded,
“For women as a group, light to moderate alcohol consumption offers
significant survival advantages. It was associated with a decreased risk
of death from cardiovascular disease; heavier drinking was associated
with an increased risk of death from other causes, particularly breast
cancer and cirrhosis.” Benefits were most pronounced for women with risk
factors for heart disease and those 50 years and older.
Other Harvard University cohort studies, the Framingham Heart Study
as well as the Kaiser Permanente Study confirm overall mortality
benefits for moderate drinkers. The National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey (NHANES), the largest government survey of Americans’
health and lifestyle habits, reported that for white males, “Moderate
drinking increases the time until death from any cause by about 3
percent.”
At the same time, scientists point out that more research is needed
to provide a true risk/benefit analysis for different gender and age
groups that considers not only coronary heart disease and overall
mortality, but also various types of cancer. In particular, some studies
find a link between alcohol consumption and breast cancer in women.
However, most researchers feel that the cardiovascular benefits of
moderate alcohol consumption far outweigh the breast cancer risks
(Cardiovascular disease is very common; breast cancer is rare in
comparison).
Wine Phenolics and Disease
Prevention
While some researchers believe that all alcoholic beverages provide
equal benefit, several scientists believe wine offers benefits in
addition to its ethyl alcohol component. The beverage-specific data from
the ongoing Copenhagen City Heart Study reported that wine drinkers were
least likely to die from any cause during the 12-year study period. “Our
finding, that only wine drinking clearly reduces both the risk of dying
from cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease and the risk of dying
from other causes”, write researcher Morton Gronbaek and colleagues,
“suggests that other more broadly acting factors in wine may be
present.”
Research programs on other factors in wine has resulted in several
studies in the past few years on the antioxidant and protective effects
of wine compounds. Several phenolic compounds in wine (such as
quercetin, epicatechin and resveratrol) inhibit platelet aggregation and
act as antioxidants to prevent the breakdown of LDL cholesterol into
atherosclerotic plaque. One in vitro study even found that these
compounds were more effective than vitamin E in inhibiting LDL
oxidation. Since 1991 over three dozen studies have provided preliminary
evidence that wine phenolics have positive health effects. However, as
most of this research comes from animal studies, it has not yet been
demonstrated that this is applicable to humans.
Summary Perspective
Key recent cohort studies (Harvard’s Physician’s Health Study and the
American Cancer Society’s Cancer Prevention Study II) found lower
mortality profiles for moderate drinkers. The ACS study was the largest
on alcohol consumption to date, with nearly half a million subjects,
finding all-cause mortality risk to be reduced by approximately 20% for
both men and women who consumed one drink per day. Several published
reviews have pointed out that higher levels of alcohol consumption can
be detrimental to health in many ways. However, as Finnish researcher
Kari Poikolainen wrote in a 1995 review in the Journal of Clinical
Epidemiology, “The lowest risk of death seems to be at the average
intake level of one drink per day.”
Key studies throughout the 1990’s (see Table last month) associate
approx. one drink per day with increased longevity. In each study,
all-cause mortality rates for moderate drinking men and women, in
diverse populations such as the US, China and Australia, are
significantly lower than rates for non-drinkers. Based on a decade of
research findings, Richard Doll, M.D. (in the British Medical Journal)
calls the evidence for alcohol’s beneficial effect “now massive. People
should told the facts. These still need to be defined in detail, but in
broad outline they are quite clear: In middle and old age, some amount
of alcohol within the range of one to four drinks each day reduces the
risk of premature death, irrespective of the medium in which it is
taken.”
The U.S. Dietary Guidelines advises moderation, which is defined as
no more than two drinks per day for men and no more than one drink per
day for women. Forthcoming research will continue to clarify the effects
of moderate wine and alcohol consumption in healthy diets and balanced
lifestyles. It is hoped that these findings will be reflected in
worldwide nutrition policies like the year 2000 Dietary Guidelines for
Americans.
Drinking Wine May Lower Risk
for Upper Digestive Tract Cancer
Many research studies have associated alcohol consumption with
increased risk of upper digestive tract cancers. But Morton Gronbaek and
colleagues at the Institute for Preventive Medicine in Copenhagen,
Denmark, report just the opposite. They speculate that previous studies
did not analyze data for specific types of beverages and/or did not
distinguish between use and abuse. Although they acknowledge that their
analysis may not be perfect, the Danish researchers tracked the 13-year
incidence of mouth, throat and esophageal cancers among 28,000 Danes.
They report that heavy drinkers experienced a 12-fold increase in upper
digestive cancers compared with abstainers. But among moderate drinkers,
those who consumed at least 30% of their alcohol intake in the form of
wine were at slightly lower risk than non-drinkers for these cancers. “A
moderate intake of wine probably does not increase the risk of upper
digestive tract cancer.” They speculate that compounds found in wine,
such as resveratrol, may exert powerful anticarcinogenic effects that
protect against any cancer-causing effects of alcohol. “Wine contains
several components with possible anticarcinogenic effects - these may
exert their action locally in parallel with the possible effect of
ethanol.”
New Research Developments of
the Antioxidant Front
The Italian National Institute of Nutrition (Rome) found that
phenolic compounds in wine are absorbed in the gastrointestinal tract
and “might be directly involved in the in vivo antioxi-dant defenses.”
This study clearly associated non-alcoholic components in wine with
increased plasma antioxidant capacity, which may lead to a reduced risk
in coronary heart disease.
A team of researchers from New York, Japan and the University of
Illinois reported prelim-inary evidence that resveratrol (a compound
found primarily in grapes and wine) may inhibit cancer growth in humans.
Moderate Drinkers’ Benefits
Begin in Early Adulthood
A new study from the UK, published in The Lancet, has found that
among young adults, moderate drinkers are at a reduced risk of
psychological distress, poor general health and long-term illness
compared to abstainers and heavy drinkers. Dr. Chris Powers and
associates studied 9,605 men and women at age 23 with a follow-up at 33.
They found that men drinking between 11-35 units of alcohol and women
drinking between 6-20 units of alcohol per week experienced fewer
health-related problems than nondrinkers and heavy drinkers. One unit of
alcohol was the equivalent to a half pint of beer, one measure of
spirits or one glass of wine.
Dr. Powers is from the Institute of Child Health (London) and the
co-authors are from the Australian National University (Canberra). They
hope to continue the research with the same subjects in order to see how
they progress with age. This is one of the first studies to look at the
effects of alcohol consumption in early adulthood and it’s long-term
effects on health.
The information in this article
is for educational purposes only. Wine should be enjoyed in a
responsible manner as part of a well balanced lifestyle by healthy
adults who choose to drink. “If you drink alcoholic beverages, do so in
moderation, with meals, and when consumption does not put you or others
at risk” ~ Advice for Today, 1995 U.S. Dietary Guidelines for Americans.
Meanwhile, the
research on the health benefits of wine continues!
Updates on Wine and Health
Wine
linked with lower lung cancer risk
NEW YORK, Mar 01, 2000 (Reuters Health) -- Male wine drinkers may
have a lower risk of lung cancer than those who drink beer or spirits.
Dr. Eva Prescott and colleagues at Copenhagen University Hospital
examined data from three Danish studies involving more than 28,000
adults. Overall, they found no association between low to moderate
alcohol intake and lung cancer risk. When the analysis was limited to
men, they observed that those who drank wine had a lower risk of lung
cancer than those who did not drink wine. But the data also suggested an
increased risk of lung cancer in men who drank beer or spirits. For
example, men who reported drinking 1 to 13 glasses of wine per week had
a 22% lower risk of lung cancer compared with drinkers of other types of
alcohol. Men who consumed more than 13 glasses of wine per week had a
56% lower risk than other alcohol drinkers. The researchers suggest that
the seemingly protective effect “may be related to the antioxidant
properties of wine, and deserves further attention.” SOURCE: American
Journal of Epidemiology 1999;149:463-470.
Light-to-moderate alcohol
intake may prevent stroke
NEW YORK, Nov 17, 1999 (Reuters Health) -- People who consume as
little as one alcoholic drink per day significantly reduce their risk of
stroke, but drinking more does not increase the benefit, results of a
study suggest. Previous studies have shown that “drinking moderate
amounts of alcohol may have protective effects against subtypes of
stroke,” according to Dr. Klaus Berger, from Brigham and Women's
Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, and colleagues.
The researchers analyzed the medical records of more than 22,000 male
doctors aged 40 - 84. Over 12 years, 679 men experienced first strokes.
Most of the strokes were caused by interruptions of the brain’s blood
supply (ischemic strokes), while fewer than 15% were caused by brain
bleeding (hemorrhagic strokes). Compared with other participants, the
group of men who consumed at least one drink per week had a 21% lower
risk of having any type of stroke.
The same group had a 23% lower risk of ischemic stroke, the
scientists calculated. Drinking had neither a positive nor a negative
effect on the risk of hemorrhagic stroke. After Berger and his
colleagues accounted for other risk factors, they found that “the
largest risk reductions were found among the men who had one to four
drinks per week.” Blood pressure and exercise affected the impact of
drinking on stroke risk, according to the investigators. Alcohol
consumption benefited men whose blood pressure was 140 or higher or who
exercised at least once a week. The authors conclude that
“light-to-moderate consumption of alcohol (one to seven drinks per week)
reduced the risks of total stroke and ischemic stroke.” SOURCE: The New
England Journal of Medicine 1999;341:1557-1564, 1605-1606.
Red wine without the alcohol
good for the heart
NEW YORK, Jan 03, 2000 (Reuters Health) -- It may not please wine
connoisseurs, but red wine without the alcohol is also good for the
heart, researchers report. Dr. Jennifer R.C. Bell and colleagues at the
University of California, Davis, report the results of their study, in
which they took a 1996 Cabernet Sauvignon and removed the alcohol. They
then asked 5 men and 4 women -- all healthy -- to drink about a 1/2 cup
of the wine, with water added on one day and water and ethanol added on
the other. The investigators measured levels of the flavonoid
“(+)-catechin” -- the wine component credited with heart benefits --
after consumption.
The researchers collected blood at baseline and then 30 minutes, 1, 2
3, 4 and 8 hours after consumption. They found that the half-life of
(+)-catechin was significantly shorter (3.17 hours) when subjects drank
alcoholic red wine than when they drank the dealcoholized version (4.08
hours). Bell and colleagues report that increases in total (+)-catechin
in plasma were similar after ingestion of alcoholic and nonalcoholic red
wine and that gender had no effect.
But moderate amounts of alcohol also make a contribution to heart
health. Previous research shows that alcohol by itself increases
concentration of HDL -- “the good cholesterol” -- in the blood, the
researchers note. “The results (of this study)... suggest that red wine
provides two independent factors capable of contributing to vascular
health when consumed in moderation,” the investigators write, namely the
HDL-boosting effects of alcohol and the increase of flavonoids in the
blood. SOURCE: American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2000;71:103-108.
One drink is good, more than
two isn't
NEW YORK, Jan 03, 2000 (Reuters Health) -- Consumption of one
alcoholic drink per day appears to reduce the risk of heart disease in
middle-aged men, but more than two drinks each day may offset these
benefits by increasing the risk of some cancers, researchers report.
“Our observational research shows that there seems to be benefit of
light to moderate alcohol consumption,” Dr. J. Michael Gaziano told
Reuters Health. “However, people shouldn’t drink instead of doing other
preventive activities such as stopping smoking, controlling cholesterol
and exercising.” And the data from US physicians participating in the
Physicians’ Health Study show that excess consumption will cancel the
benefits of moderate consumption, by increasing the risk of some of the
less common cancers.
Any recommendation on alcohol consumption should be individualized
through discussions with a physician, according to Gaziano of the
Veterans Affairs Medical Center and Brigham and Women's Hospital in
Boston, Massachusetts. People with liver disease or a history of alcohol
abuse should not drink at all, while those with diabetes and
hypertension may partake in light alcohol consumption, Gaziano said.
Gaziano and colleagues analyzed self-reported alcohol consumption of
89,299 male physicians between the ages of 40 and 84 years with no prior
medical history of heart attack, stroke, cancer or liver disease. Their
findings are reported in the January issue of the Journal of the
American College of Cardiology. After an average of more than 5 years of
follow-up the data revealed that, “light to moderate drinking -- perhaps
one per day -- shows benefits in reducing risk of heart disease with no
increased risk of cancer,” Gaziano said. SOURCE: Journal of the American
College of Cardiology 2000;35:96-105.
Moderate drinking lowers
diabetes risk in men
NEW YORK, Jan 06, 2000 (Reuters Health) -- Men who are ‘moderate’
drinkers -- between 5 to 10 drinks per week -- have a lower risk for
adult-onset diabetes than either abstainers or heavy drinkers,
researchers report. “Men with a high alcohol intake may be able to
reduce their risk of developing type 2 diabetes if they drink less,”
report Dr. Ming Wei and colleagues at the Cooper Institute in Dallas,
Texas.
As reported previously by Reuters Health, numerous studies have
suggested that having a drink or two per day appears to have a
protective effect against cardiovascular disease. In their study, Wei’s
team examined rates of type 2 diabetes -- the adult-onset form of the
disease affecting 95% of all diabetics -- in over 8,600 Texan men. They
found that diabetes risks were lowest in men who drank between 5 and 10
drinks per week, compared with either abstain-ers/infrequent drinkers (0
to 5 drinks per week) or heavy drinkers (10 to 22 drinks or above). In
fact, infrequent or heavy drinkers faced twice the risk of type 2
diabetes of moderate drinkers!
Wei told Reuters Health that, according to previous studies, moderate
drinking “reduces insulin resistance,” while heavy alcohol consumption
“increases insulin resistance.” Insulin resistance -- in which the body
gradually stops responding to the sugar hoarding effect of the hormone
insulin -- is thought to precede full-blown type 2 diabetes. Based on
their findings, the authors estimate that “24% of the incident cases of
diabetes in (adult men) might be attributable to high alcohol intake.”
While they do not recommend that abstainers take up drinking to lower
their diabetes risk, they do urge that heavy drinkers cut back in order
to lower their risk. SOURCE: Diabetes Care 2000;23:18-22
Study Suggests Why
Red Wine Does a Heart Good
By Suzanne Rostler
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - UK researchers have zeroed in on compounds
in red wine that battle a protein linked to heart disease--a finding
that provides clues to why the French have relatively low rates of heart
disease despite a national diet rich in creamy cheese and buttery
desserts. The investigators found that polyphenols--compounds in grape
skins and present in red wine--decrease the production of a protein that
causes blood vessels to constrict and reduces the flow of oxygen to the
heart. The protein, endothelin-1, is believed to play a key role in the
development of heart disease, explain Dr. Roger Corder and colleagues
from Queen Mary University of London.
Their findings support the results of earlier studies showing that a
moderate intake of red wine may lower the risk of heart disease. But
while these studies focused on the antioxidant properties of
polyphenols--their ability to quench disease-causing free radicals in
the body--the results of the new study suggest a new mechanism by which
red wine might bring benefits. According to the report in the December
20/27th issue of Nature, red wine polyphenols inhibit protein tyrosine
kinases, a group of enzymes that play a key role in cell regulation.
Compounds that inhibit these enzymes have been shown to suppress
endothelin production, Corder told Reuters Health.
“We believe that red wines contain specific polyphenols that inhibit
protein tyrosine kinases, and that this effect leads to suppression of
endothelin synthesis,” he said in an interview. “The effects we describe
are completely unrelated to any antioxidant properties of polyphenols.'”
White wine is made without the use of grape skins, while red wine is
made by fermenting the juice from grapes along with the skins. Grape
skin provides red wine with its color, and also contains the highest
concentration of polyphenols. Other alcoholic beverages do not contain
these compounds. “Consumption of one to two glasses of red wine per day
with food might be considered part of a diet to reduce heart disease,
provided there are no health grounds for avoiding alcohol, and that the
person is not going to drive or operate equipment,” Corder said. The
study findings are based on experiments with cow artery cells treated
with alcohol-free extracts of various red, white and rose wines. The
researchers also tried an extract of red grape juice, which inhibited
endothelin production, but much less so than red wine did.
SOURCE: Nature 2001;414:863-864.
Updates on Wine, Alcohol, and Health
Moderate Drinking May Cut Women's Risk of Diabetes
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - New research suggests that drinking moderate
amounts of alcohol may help prevent healthy postmenopausal women from
developing diabetes as well as heart disease. According to the report,
women who consumed one to two drinks a day were better able to respond
to insulin, a hormone that helps cells use sugar for energy. These women
also had lower levels of insulin in their blood. High blood levels of
insulin, as well as decreased insulin sensitivity, are risk factors for
heart disease and type 2 diabetes.
In the study, 51 healthy, postmenopausal women rotated among three
8-week treatment periods in which they consumed either no alcohol, one
drink a day, or two drinks daily, in addition to a diet to maintain
their body weight. Blood samples drawn from the women revealed that
insulin levels were nearly 20% lower after consuming two drinks compared
to women consuming no alcohol. Levels of triglycerides, a type of fat
associated with increased risk of heart disease, were about 10% lower in
the two-drink-a-day group compared with the no-alcohol group. Insulin
sensitivity rose by roughly 7% after two drinks. There was no effect on
blood glucose.
The researchers attributed the findings to the effects of alcohol, but
note that other compounds in red wine may provide additional protection.
Whatever the beneficial component in alcohol may be, the findings are
consistent with previous reports that have observed improved insulin
sensitivity among nondiabetic adults who drink moderately.
SOURCE: The Journal of the American Medical Association 2002;287:2559
(5/15/02)
Moderate Drinking May Cut
Dementia Risk -Study
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Moderate drinking may reduce an older
person’s risk of developing dementia, a new study suggests. Researchers
in the Netherlands found that among the 5,400 older adults they studied,
those who had up to three drinks a day were less likely than
non-drinkers to develop any type of dementia, including Alzheimer’s
disease. And it did not matter whether the alcohol was wine, beer,
liquor, or a fortified wine such as sherry. However, the relatively few
who said they had four or more drinks in a day saw no such protective
effect.
Past research has suggested that a drink or two a day might help ward
off the mental decline associated with age. Since evidence also shows
light-to-moderate drinking may benefit the heart, investigators
speculated that alcohol might similarly help maintain blood flow to the
brain by reducing clotting or improving cholesterol levels. Another
possibility is that alcohol directly affects mental functioning through
the release of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine. Substantial evidence
indicates that ACH affects learning and memory. Low levels of alcohol
stimulate the chemical’s release in humans, while higher alcohol levels
inhibit it in studies with rats.
In the study, mentally healthy men and women aged 55 and older were
followed for an average of 6 years. During the study, 197 participants
developed dementia, most often Alzheimer's disease. Those who had said
they drank one to three alcoholic beverages a day were 42% less likely
to develop any type of dementia, regardless of the other health factors.
They were 70% less likely than non-drinkers to be diagnosed with
vascular dementia, an impairment caused by significant reductions in the
brain’s blood supply.
In addition, a couple of drinks per day showed a protective effect among
people who carried the gene variant ApoE4, which is associated with an
increased Alzheimer’s risk. The researchers speculated that alcohol,
possibly through improving cholesterol levels, might moderate dementia
risk among ApoE4 carriers.
SOURCE: The Lancet 2002;359:281-286 (1/26/02)
Red Wine May Keep Prostate
Cancer Cells in Check
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Compounds in red wine may keep prostate
cancer cells from proliferating, results of a preliminary laboratory
study suggest. Researchers from Spain found five different polyphenols,
antioxidants found in red wine, tea, and certain fruits and vegetables,
inhibited the growth of prostate cancer cells in a test tube and
encouraged cancer cells to “commit suicide,” a natural process called
apoptosis.
The findings, if confirmed by larger studies, may help to explain the
higher rates of prostate cancer in the US and non-Mediterranean European
countries. The rate of prostate cancer in Mediterranean countries, where
intake of red wine and other polyphenol-containing foods is high, tends
to be lower. The Mediterranean diet is considered to be protective
against the endocrine cancers (including prostate cancer), and features
a low animal-fat and meat content, with a high intake of fresh fruit,
vegetables, pasta, and wine.
The study examined the effect of five polyphenols found in red
wine--gallic acid, tannic acid, morin, quercetin and rutin--on prostate
cancer cells. The researchers added varying amounts of these compounds
to a dish containing prostate cancer cells. All five compounds inhibited
cell proliferation and promoted apoptosis. The results point to a need
for studies investigating the effects of these compounds in humans with
the potential goal of developing recommendations for use in cancer
prevention. Prostate cancer is the second-deadliest form of cancer for
US men, after lung cancer, according to the American Cancer Society.
SOURCE: BJU International 2002;89:950-954.
Light Drinking May Help Keep
Leg Arteries Clear
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Moderate drinkers may be less likely to
develop blockages in the arteries that supply blood to the legs. In a
study of almost 4,000 people over 55, Dutch researchers found that all
women and non-smoking men who reported having 1 or 2 drinks a day were
less likely than nondrinkers to have peripheral arterial disease (PAD).
These results complement previous research that suggests light drinking
can reduce cardiovascular disease risk.
The strongest effect was noted in non-smoking women who were 59% less
likely to have PAD than teetotalers. PAD occurs when arteries in the
legs become blocked by a buildup of fatty material, a process known as
atherosclerosis. PAD can lead to leg cramps when walking.
Atherosclerosis in general can bring on stroke and heart attacks.
Alcohol may slow atherosclerosis by inhibiting the oxidation of
cholesterol, which prevents it from accumulating inside arteries. Since
atherosclerosis can lead to other cardiovascular problems, reducing this
process may be the means by which light drinking promotes heart and
blood vessel health in general. The benefits of alcohol may stem
primarily from red wine. This could explain the stronger effect seen in
women, since women tended to choose wine, whereas almost half of men
liked beer best.
SOURCE: American Journal of Epidemiology 2002;155:332-338.
Alcohol May Benefit Heart
Attack Patients
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Moderate drinking has been linked with a
lower risk of a heart attack. Two new studies show that a drink a day
may promote survival in patients after a heart attack, as well as help
the elderly avoid heart failure. The researchers of both reports found
that any type of alcohol had potentially healthy effects when consumed
in moderation. Alcohol has been shown to raise HDL (“good”) cholesterol
and prevent blood clots from forming.
One study of more than 1,900 adults who had been hospitalized for heart
attack found that patients who consumed seven drinks a week in the year
before their heart attack had a 32% lower risk of dying compared with
teetotalers. And those who consumed less than seven drinks a week
lowered their risk of dying by 21% over nearly 4 years, compared with
patients who abstained from drinking. The findings suggest that alcohol
consumption is probably safe after a heart attack for moderate drinkers.
Patients who abstain from alcohol may need more aggressive treatment
with drugs such as aspirin, beta-blockers, and cholesterol-lowering
medications.
Another study found that elderly people who drank at least 1.5 drinks
per day had a risk of heart failure 47% lower than abstainers,
regardless of age, race, blood pressure, history of diabetes, smoking,
and other factors. The study included 2,200 adults averaging 74 years of
age.
SOURCE: Journal of the American Medical Association 2001;285:1965-1977.
Moderate Drinking Helps
Preserve Women’s Mental Functioning
TORONTO (Reuters Health) - Consuming less than one alcoholic drink per
day may help preserve the mental function of older women. Between 1995
and 1999, 9,072 women in the Nurses’ Health Study, aged 70 to 79, were
interviewed. Mental function was assessed using seven different tests.
Information about their alcohol use had been collected at the beginning
of the study in 1980, and was updated through 1994. After adjusting for
other factors that could affect mental function, the researchers found
that the women who drank moderately had better average scores on five of
the seven tests and on a score that combined all seven tests. The effect
seen on cognitive function was the equivalent of being 1 or 2 years
younger.
SOURCE: Presentation by Dr. Meir Stampfer (Professor of Epidemiology and
Nutrition at Harvard School of Public Health) at the 2001 Congress of
Epidemiology.
Study Sheds Light on Wine’s Benefits
(Molecules
found in food and wine may help to extend life)
(Reuters) - In a
research paper, Harvard scientists announced they have found a new class
of chemicals that may extend life. The research is preliminary, but what
makes it interesting is the chemicals can be found in some red wine.
Researchers
have known for years that cutting calories can prolong life in
everything from yeast cells to mammals. But an easier way to live longer
may be as simple as turning a corkscrew. Molecules found in red wine,
peanuts, and other products of the plant world have for the first time
been shown to mimic the life-extending effects of calorie restriction.
This could help researchers develop drugs that lengthen life and prevent
or treat aging-related diseases. One of the molecules, resveratrol,
was shown in a study to extend the life span of yeast cells by up to 80
percent. Resveratrol exists naturally in grapes and red wine.
David
Sinclair, an assistant professor of pathology at Harvard Medical School
and co-author of the study, said he and his fellow researchers hope the
molecules will prove to prolong life not just in yeast but in
multi-cellular organisms like worms, fruit flies, and perhaps humans.
Sinclair, whose study appears in the journal Nature, said tests on worms
and flies were already yielding “encouraging” results. Similar trials
are already being planned on mice.
‘ENTHUSIASTIC’ OVER
RED WINE
Sinclair said he
has become more “enthusiastic” about the purported health benefits of
red wine since his research began, and that experts who have reviewed
his findings have had a similar response. “Not many people know about it
yet, but those who do have almost invariably changed their drinking
habits; that is, they drink more red wine,” he said.
The
molecules that were shown to extend life in yeast belong to a family of
compounds known as polyphenols. These include resveratrol, which
is already thought to make red wine healthy in moderate amounts.
Sinclair said the latest study may help explain why moderate consumption
of red wine has been linked to lower incidence of heart disease and why
resveratrol prevents cancer in mice.“We’re connecting many dots with
this study,” he said.
Scientists
have known for decades that putting organisms on a calorie-restricted
diet dramatically reduces the incidence of age-related illnesses such as
cancer, osteoporosis, and heart disease. In the 1990s, research showed
that single genes can control how fast organisms age. Because of that,
scientists have been racing to find ways of manipulating those
genes.
Sinclair
and his team have been looking for what he calls the Holy Grail of aging
research: molecules that activate the enzymes that in turn influence the
genes that regulate aging. Now, they say, they have found those
molecules.
Sinclair’s
team partnered with BIOMOL, a Pennsylvania company, to screen thousands
of molecules to see which ones might activate the enzymes. Not only did
they find a group of 18 molecules that fit the bill — resveratrol being
just one — but all of them came from plants and were produced in
response to harsh environmental conditions like drought.
“We think
we know why these plants make these molecules. We think it’s part of
their own defense response, and we also believe that animals and fungi
that live on the plants can pick up on these clues,” he said.
To
illustrate that theory, Sinclair noted that red wines from regions with
harsher growing conditions — Spain, Chile, northern France, Argentina,
and Australia — contain more resveratrol than those produced where
grapes are not highly stressed or dehydrated.
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