Drinking Without Food May Set You Up For High Blood Pressure
Even light-to-moderate consumption increases risk if it occurs outside of meals
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During this season to be jolly, when alcohol flows more freely than
usual, a new study alerts drinkers that a habit of drinking outside of meals may
be setting them up for high
blood pressure.
Research conducted at the University at Buffalo has
shown that consuming alcohol mostly without food is a significant risk factor
for developing hypertension. The effect was present even in people with
light-to-moderate alcohol intake.
The research also confirmed previous
findings showing a positive relationship between heavy alcohol use and high
blood pressure. Results of the study appear in the December issue of the journal
Hypertension.
"These findings support the notion that in addition to
amount, the way in which alcohol is consumed may have important implications for
health and, in particular, for cardiovascular disease," said lead researcher
Saverio Stranges, M.D., research instructor in the Department of Social and
Preventive Medicine in the UB School of Public Health and Health Professions.
The findings were based on blood pressure readings and self-reported
alcohol consumption patterns from a randomly selected sample of 2,609 white men
and women between the ages of 35 and 80 who took part in the Western New York
Health Study. All participants were free of other cardiovascular diseases.
In a computer-assisted, in-person interview, participants provided data
on their alcohol consumption during the past 30 days. Questions covered how
often they drank during that time period, when they drank (weekdays versus
weekends), how much they drank (drinks per day) and if they drank with meals,
with snacks or without food. They also reported whether they drank mostly beer,
wine or liquor.
Based on responses, participants also were classified as
lifetime abstainers, those who reported having fewer than 12 drinks in their
lifetime or in any one-year period; non-current drinkers, participants
having more than 12 drinks during their lifetime or in any one year but
no drinks during the past 30 days, and current drinkers, participants having
consumed at least one alcoholic beverage during the past 30 days.
Current drinkers were divided into categories depending on how often
they drank: less than weekly, weekly non-daily; weekend only; or weekly daily.
Three blood-pressure readings were taken on each participant by trained
personnel during the interview. The mean of the second and third reading then
were used for the study. Hypertension was defined by systolic blood pressure of
140 mm Hg or greater or diastolic blood pressure of 90 mm Hg or greater, or by
the fact that an individual was taking medication for high blood pressure.
Results confirmed findings of a previous study conducted in Italy by
some of the same investigators and also showed for the first time that even
light to moderate alcohol intake outside of meals puts drinkers at risk for
hypertension.
"This is a novel finding with potentially important
clinical implications," said Stranges. "It points out that drinking without food
may counteract any benefit to the cardiovascular system associated with moderate
alcohol consumption."
Those drinking mostly outside of mealtimes
reported a significant increase in risk of hypertension compared with either
lifetime abstainers or those drinking mostly with food.
Not
surprisingly, results confirmed that a high level of alcohol consumption --
defined as more than two drinks per day -- is associated with an increased risk
of high blood pressure. "In fact," said Stranges, "the average volume of alcohol
consumed during the past 30 days played a much more important role in the
relationship between drinking and high blood pressure than how often a person
drank."
There was no difference in risk based on the type of alcohol
consumed, or the gender of drinkers.
"These findings add new and
important information to the mounting evidence linking drinking pattern to
numerous health outcomes" concluded Stranges.
Additional researchers on
the study were, Joan Dorn, Ph.D., Jo Freudenheim, Ph.D., Paola Muti, M.D., and
Maurizio Trevisan, M.D., from the UB Department of Social and Preventive
Medicine; Tiejan Wu, Ph.D., formerly of UB, now at East Tennessee State
University, Johnson City, Tenn.; Eduardo Farinaro, M.D., of "Federico II"
University of Naples Medical School, Naples, Italy; Marcia Russell, Ph.D., of
the Prevention Research Center, Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation,
Berkeley, Calif., and Thomas H. Nochajski, Ph.D., of the UB School of Social
Work.
The study was supported in part by a grant from the National
Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.
Contact: Lois
Baker
ljbaker@buffalo.edu
716-645-5000 x1417
University at Buffalo