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Drink a Day Improves
Overall Heart Health
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) -
People who drink one drink a day -- wine, beer or hard liquor
-- show significantly better elasticity of their body's arteries,
an important measure of cardiovascular health, results of a new
study suggest.
"We thought only red wine helps,
but we found if people drink one beer or one unit of hard liquor
a day, they also have improved arterial elasticity, better than
nondrinkers," said Dr. Reuven Zimlichman of Wolfson Medical Center
and Tel Aviv University in Israel.
The research is scheduled to be
presented Thursday at a meeting of the American Society of Hypertension.
When arteries lose elasticity,
they fail to relax as the heart pumps blood. This causes a rise
in the systolic blood pressure, something Zimlichman calls a "terrible
predictor" of future strokes, cardiovascular disease and heart
attacks.
The researchers also found that
moderate drinkers had pulse rates that were significantly lower
than those of nondrinkers.
"There's been lots of study of
pulse rates and the risk of disease," Zimlichman said. He noted
that higher pulse rates are associated with an increased risk
of disease and death.
In comparing wine drinkers with
drinkers who favor other alcoholic beverages, the researchers
observed that beer and hard liquor drinkers had slightly higher
blood pressure than wine drinkers. But all drinkers had blood
pressure within normal ranges, Zimlichman said.
The researchers studied 243 healthy
people between the ages of 15 and 80 who volunteered to fill out
questionnaires and be tested at clinics in seven European countries.
They excluded people who drank
more than one drink a day and adjusted their findings for age
because arterial elasticity commonly gets worse with age.
Asked if this study means nondrinkers
should start drinking, Zimlichman pointed out that heavy drinking
itself can cause high blood pressure.
"Whenever you recommend drinking,
you have to consider the possibility that somebody will like it
too much and over-drink and cause damage to his health," he said.
"But if someone has a high risk of cardiovascular disease, I recommend
to my patients that they drink one glass of red wine a day."
Although his study showed similar
benefits for beer and hard liquor as for wine, Zimlichman only
recommends wine.
"Those who drink one drink of hard
liquor a day have more of a chance to increase the dose," he noted.
Reference
Source 89
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