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WINE FOR THE HEART
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
EDMONTON,
Alb. (June 13, 1997)- A glass of wine may be healthiest choice if you
want to experience the cardioprotective effects of moderate alcohol consumption,
suggests a new study presented at the annual meeting of the Society for
Epidemiological Research.
Excessive alcohol consumption raises blood pressure, destroys liver
cells and weakens the immune system. However, data from epidemiological
studies has shown that those who consume moderate amounts of alcohol,
one or two drinks a day, live longer than abstainers or heavy drinkers.
The original studies involved countries surrounding the Mediterranean.
This led researchers to look to wine, the primary drink of that area, for
specific health benefits. Subsequent studies in Northern Europe indicated
that the cardiovascular benefits seen in France and Italy could also be
observed in northern Europeans who consumed moderate amounts of beer or
liquor.
New data from the University of Buffalo may start the pendulum swinging
back in favor of wine over other forms of drink. UB epidemiologists have
shown, in research to determine the relationship between different types
of alcoholic beverages and oxidative stress (cell damage caused by free
radicals) that people who drink wine appear to experience less alcohol-related
oxidative stress than people who drink beer or liquor.
"The difference was small but significant," said Maurizio Trevisan,
M.D., professor and chair of the UB Department
of Social and Preventive Medicine and lead author on the study. "Our findings
support the notion that different sources of alcohol have different effects
on oxidative status and could have a different impact on health outcomes
linked to damage from free radicals."
Oxidative stress is known to play a role in many chronic diseases, including
heart disease, cancer and neurological degenerative disorders. Alcohol,
for its part, has been shown to exert positive effects on oxidative processes,
raising levels of HDL ("good") cholesterol and inhibiting artery-clogging
plaque formation.
The study is different from previous research on this issue, Trevisan
noted, because it was conducted in a random sample of a healthy population,
oxidative stress was measured through blood samples, and researchers collected
extensive information on alcohol consumption. Participants were 491 non-smoking
men and women ages 35-73, selected randomly from the population of Erie
and Niagara counties in Western New York. Oxidative stress was determined
by measuring the concentration of thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances,
or TBARS -- products generated by oxidative stress to lipids (fats) in
the blood.
The research showed that participants who derived their alcohol from
beer and liquor had higher levels of
TBARS than participants who drank wine.
Trevisan characterized the findings as interesting, but preliminary.
"We know that alcohol is an oxidant and that wine is an antioxidant," he
said. "It's possible that some component of wine counteracts the effects
of alcohol from other sources."
It is also possible that diet plays a role in this equation, he noted.
Wine drinkers may consume foods higher in antioxidants than drinkers of
other sources of alcohol. The researchers have diet data from this study
population and will report results of that analysis at a later date, Trevisan
said.
Related information on the Internet
1996 USDA
Guidelines
AHA
Statement, Alcohol and the Heart
AHA: Alcohol
and Stroke
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