Attention men: the benefits of red wine, from the
Harvard Men’s Health Watch
June
2007
Click here to read original article.
Researchers have found that men who
drink an average of four to seven glasses of red wine per week are only 52% as
likely to be diagnosed with prostate cancer as those who do not drink red wine,
reports the June 2007 issue of Harvard Men’s Health Watch. In addition, red
wine appears particularly protective against advanced or aggressive cancers.
Researchers in Seattle collected
information about many factors that might influence the risk of prostate cancer
in men between ages 40 and 64, including alcohol consumption. At first the
results for alcohol consumption seemed similar to the findings of many earlier
studies: There was no relationship between overall consumption and risk. But
the scientists went one step further by evaluating each type of alcoholic
beverage independently. Here the news was surprising—wine drinking was linked
to a reduced risk of prostate cancer. And when white wine was compared with
red, red had the most benefit. Even low amounts seemed to help, and for every
additional glass of red wine per week, the relative risk declined by 6%.
Why red wine? Doctors don’t know.
But much of the speculation focuses on chemicals—including various flavonoids
and resveratrol—missing from other alcoholic beverages. These components have
antioxidant properties, and some appear to counterbalance androgens, the male
hormones that stimulate the prostate.
Many doctors are reluctant to
recommend drinking alcohol for health, fearing that their patients might assume
that if a little alcohol is good, a lot might be better. The Harvard Men’s
Health Watch notes that men who enjoy alcohol and can drink in moderation
and responsibly may benefit from a lower risk of heart attack, stroke,
diabetes, and cardiac death.
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