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Daily
glass of Wine could improve Liver Health
Newswise — Researchers at UC San Diego
School of Medicine are challenging
conventional thinking with a study showing
that modest wine consumption, defined as one
glass a day, may not only be safe for the
liver, but may actually decrease the
prevalence of Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver
Disease (NAFLD).
The study, which appears in the June 2008
issue of the journal Hepatology, showed that
for individuals who reported drinking up to
one glass of wine per day, as compared to no
alcohol consumption, the risk of liver
disease due to NAFLD was cut in half. In
contrast, compared with wine drinkers,
individuals who reported modest consumption
of beer or liquor had over four (4) times
the odds of having suspected NAFLD.
NAFLD is the most common liver disease in
the United States, affecting over 40 million
adults. Previous research has shown that as
many as five percent of adults with NAFLD
will develop cirrhosis.
The major risk factors for NAFLD are similar
to many of the risk factors for
cardiovascular disease—obesity, diabetes,
high triglycerides, and high blood pressure.
Multiple studies have shown that modest
alcohol consumption may reduce the risk for
heart disease.
However, recommendations for modest alcohol
consumption in individuals at risk for
cardiovascular disease have overlooked that
these same people are also at an increased
risk for NAFLD.
Thus, there exists a dilemma as to whether
modest alcohol consumption for the heart is
safe in regards to the liver. The UC San
Diego investigators sought to clarify this
important question.
“The results of this study present a
paradigm shift, suggesting that modest wine
consumption may not only be safe for the
liver but may actually decrease the
prevalence of NAFLD.
The odds of having suspected NAFLD based
upon abnormal liver blood tests was reduced
by 50 percent in individuals who drank one
glass of wine a day,” said Jeffrey Schwimmer,
M.D., associate professor of
gastroenterology, hepatology and nutrition,
Department of Pediatrics, UC San Diego
School of Medicine and Director, Fatty Liver
Clinic at Rady Children’s Hospital San
Diego.
The result remained constant, even after
adjusting for age, sex, race, education,
income, diet, physical activity, body mass
index, and other markers of health status.
Research did not provide any support for
drinking larger amounts.
“We want to emphasize that people at risk
for alcohol abuse should not consider
consuming wine or any other alcoholic
beverage,” said Schwimmer, who also pointed
out that, although this is the first study
to address this important dilemma, the
findings do not address those who already
have liver disease and should not be
drinking alcohol at all.
“Because this effect was only seen with
wine, not in beer or liquor, further studies
will be needed to determine whether the
benefits seen were due to the alcohol or
non-alcohol components of wine,” added
Schwimmer.
The cross-sectional, population-based study
of nearly 12,000 participants in the
National Health and Nutrition Examination
Survey (NHANES) included 7,211 nondrinkers
and 4,543 modest alcohol drinkers.
Modest alcohol consumption was defined as up
to an average of one drink per day of either
four ounces of wine, 12 ounces of beer, or
one ounce of liquor. NHANES is a large
epidemiological survey conducted by the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC). The alcohol history was obtained by a
trained interviewer, in a private room, to
ensure confidentiality.
The study was funded in part with grants
from the National Institutes of Health
National Research Service Award (NIH NRSA)
and from the National Center for Research
Resources of the National Institutes of
Health for the General Clinical Research
Center at UC San Diego.
The research team included Schwimmer,
Winston Dunn, M.D., division of
gastroenterology, Department of Medicine, UC
San Diego and Ronghui Xu, Ph.D., Department
of Family and Preventive Medicine and
Department of Mathematics, UC San Diego.
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