
A new study refutes long-standing medical advice that drinkers are fond of citing.
A glass or two of booze
is good for your heart, according to long-standing medical advice that
drinkers are often fond of citing.
But, according to a study published on Friday, this cherished invitation to say "cheers" is well off the mark.
Reducing
even light consumption of alcohol will not only improve your chances
against coronary heart disease, but also help you lose weight and ease
high blood pressure, it said.
Writing
in the British Medical Journal, researchers carried out an overview of
50 published studies into the drinking habits and health of more than
260,000 people of European descent.
They looked especially at those with a key variant of a gene called ADH1B.
Previous
research has found that a single change in the DNA code in this gene
makes people less sensitive to drink, and thus less at risk from
alcoholism.
The new study discovered that individuals with the
variant drank 17 percent fewer units of alcohol per week and were
78-percent less likely to binge-drink than those without it.
They
also had a 10-percent lower risk of coronary heart disease and enjoyed
lower systolic blood pressure and body mass index (BMI).
"This
suggests that reduction of alcohol consumption, even for light to
moderate drinkers, is beneficial for cardiovascular health," the study
contended.Juan Casas, a professor of epidemiology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, who led the probe, said a decades-long belief in health benefits from light-to-moderate drinking may have been flawed.
"We now have evidence that some of these studies suffer from limitations that may affect the validity of their findings," he said in a press release.
"In our study, we saw a link between a reduced consumption of alcohol and improved cardiovascular health, regardless of whether the individual was a light, moderate or heavy drinker.
"Assuming the association is causal, it appears that even if you're a light drinker, reducing your alcohol consumption could be beneficial for your heart."
- Hard to extrapolate -
Independent commentators said the study was interesting, not least because it challenged what is now almost a dogma.
But, they cautioned, the debate was far from over.They noted the study was based only a statistical approach -- it was not designed to explore exactly why those with the ADH1B variant were healthier.
There could be causes that apply only to them, and not people without the variant, which makes general advice on drinking a risky business.
"People with
genes for alcohol intolerance may... have other unmeasured behaviours or
traits that reduce heart disease," Tim Spector, a professor of genetic
epidemiology at King's College London, told Britain's Science Media
Centre.
"A good example might be if they also had different gut microbes which prevented heart disease."
Light-to-moderate drinking is generally considered to be consumption of between 12 and 25 alcoholic units per week.
By
way of comparison, a 330-millilitre (0.58 of a pint) of lager with five
percent alcohol content has 1.6 alcohlic units, and a small 125-ml (0.3
of a pint) of wine with 12 percent alcohol content carries 1.5 units.
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