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A Little Wine, Sunlight Help
Boost Women's Health
November 08, 2007
THURSDAY, Nov. 8 (HealthDay News) -- Two of life's simple
pleasures -- a glass of wine, a little time in the sun -- may
have benefits for women's health.
Wine first: In a report from Spain, researchers at the
University of Barcelona evaluated the effects of moderate
consumption of red and white wine -- 6.8 ounces, or two glasses
a day -- in 35 nonsmoking Spanish women, average age 38.
The study was done like any other controlled medical trial, with
each woman drinking the recommended "dose" of either white or
red wine for four-week periods, with a four-week dry period
separating each round of study.
"The data showed that, in comparison with the baseline period,
consumption of both red and white wines increased serum [blood]
HDL cholesterol (often called 'good' cholesterol), which
suggests a cardio-protective effect," said the report in the
November issue of theAmerican Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
"Similarly, serum concentrations of interleukin-6 and
high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (both markers of chronic
inflammation), decreased significantly after both wine ingestion
periods," the authors wrote.
Other markers of cardiac health were affected "in a healthy way"
by red wine a little more than by white wine, the researchers
added. The study provides, "scientifically rigorous evidence"
that moderate wine consumption helps keep the heart healthy by
preventing low-grade inflammation in women, the Spanish team
concluded.
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"This continues to add to many other studies by showing the
mechanisms by which both red and white wine help prevent heart
disease," said Dr. R. Curtis Ellison, professor of medicine and
public health at Boston University. "When you give women a glass
and a half of wine each day, you have considerable effects on
improving inflammation, a little more for red wine than for
white," said Ellison, who was not involved in the research.
A number of other studies have shown the same protective effect
in men, with slightly greater intake of wine, Ellison said.
Next, sunlight: In the same issue of the journal, a
British-American team reported a trial in which levels of
inflammation-related molecules were measured against blood
levels of vitamin D, made naturally by the skin when it is
exposed to sunlight.
"The purpose of the study was to see if there was a correlation
between vitamin D levels and indicators of aging," said
co-researcher Jeffrey P. Gardner, a professor at the Center of
Human Development and Aging at the University of Medicine and
Dentistry of New Jersey.
In addition to measuring blood levels of inflammation-linked
molecules such as C-reactive protein, the researchers also
measured the length of sections of the women's DNA called
telomeres.
"Other people's work indicated that telomeres were bioindicators
of aging, more than a person's chronological age," Gardner said.
Longer telomeres indicate low levels of inflammation, he
explained.
Sure enough, the data indicated that higher levels of
circulating vitamin D was associated with longer telomere
length. Women with the lowest concentration of vitamin C and
highest concentration of C-reactive protein had telomeres short
enough to indicate about 7.6 more years of aging than women with
the highest vitamin D and lowest C-reactive protein levels.
"Optimal vitamin D status may provide a benefit during the aging
process," the researchers concluded, with additional trials
needed to prove the point.
Still, health experts caution that excessive exposure to
sunlight remains a leading risk factor for skin cancer. And
toomuchdrinking can harm the body in numerous ways.
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