News (Media Awareness Project) - US PA: Study Contradicts Evidence That Social Drinking Is Healthy |
Title: | US PA: Study Contradicts Evidence That Social Drinking Is Healthy |
Published On: | 1999-09-15 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-05 20:18:01 |
STUDY CONTRADICTS EVIDENCE THAT SOCIAL DRINKING IS HEALTHY
PHILADELPHIA--A drink before dinner may be good for the cardiovascular
system, but more than that could burden an otherwise health-conscious
drinker with chronic ailments, including heart and liver disease,
researchers warned Tuesday.
A study published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation showed social
drinking can bring about a marked release of bodily chemicals called
oxidants, capable of damaging the tissues of major organs, including the
heart, liver and brain.
"We looked at the direct effects of alcohol itself and demonstrated that
alcohol is a pro-oxidant even when blood alcohol levels are in a range that
is often attained socially," said Dr. Garret FitzGerald, senior study author
and chairman of pharmacology at the University of Pennsylvania Medical
Center.
Researchers from Penn and the Florida Institute of Technology also found
patients with chronic liver disease could suppress their oxidant stress
levels by roughly 50% if given 2,500 milligrams of the antioxidant vitamin C
for 10 days.
That suggests antioxidant vitamins or drugs could help treat alcohol-related
diseases.
Among healthy patients, the study found elevated levels of oxidant stress
after participants drank enough of a grain alcohol solution to reach a blood
alcohol level of 0.08%, the legal limit for driving in many U.S. states.
A 170-pound man would have to drink more than four beers in an hour to reach
that level.
PHILADELPHIA--A drink before dinner may be good for the cardiovascular
system, but more than that could burden an otherwise health-conscious
drinker with chronic ailments, including heart and liver disease,
researchers warned Tuesday.
A study published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation showed social
drinking can bring about a marked release of bodily chemicals called
oxidants, capable of damaging the tissues of major organs, including the
heart, liver and brain.
"We looked at the direct effects of alcohol itself and demonstrated that
alcohol is a pro-oxidant even when blood alcohol levels are in a range that
is often attained socially," said Dr. Garret FitzGerald, senior study author
and chairman of pharmacology at the University of Pennsylvania Medical
Center.
Researchers from Penn and the Florida Institute of Technology also found
patients with chronic liver disease could suppress their oxidant stress
levels by roughly 50% if given 2,500 milligrams of the antioxidant vitamin C
for 10 days.
That suggests antioxidant vitamins or drugs could help treat alcohol-related
diseases.
Among healthy patients, the study found elevated levels of oxidant stress
after participants drank enough of a grain alcohol solution to reach a blood
alcohol level of 0.08%, the legal limit for driving in many U.S. states.
A 170-pound man would have to drink more than four beers in an hour to reach
that level.
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