Alcohol in moderation 'can help prevent heart disease'

2011-02-23 10:10:09

23 February 2011 Last updated at 01:20 GMT

Glasses of wine Scientists at the University of Calgary reviewed 84 pieces of

research between 1980 and 2009

An alcoholic drink a day can help keep heart disease at bay, according to a

review of 30 years of research.

The work, published in the British Medical Journal, showed a 14% to 25%

reduction in heart disease in moderate drinkers compared with people who had

never drunk alcohol.

Another article, by the same Canadian research group, showed alcohol increased

"good" cholesterol levels.

But experts said this was not a reason to start drinking.

For many years, studies have suggested that drinking alcohol in moderation has

some health benefits.

Scientists at the University of Calgary reviewed 84 pieces of research between

1980 and 2009.

Reduced risk

One unit of alcohol in the UK, equivalent to half a pint of normal beer,

contains 8g of pure alcohol.

Start Quote

If you don't drink, this is not a reason to start. Similar results can be

achieved by being physically active and eating a balanced and healthy diet

End Quote Cathy Ross British Heart Foundation

This review showed that the overall risk of death was lower for those consuming

small quantities of alcohol, 2.5g to 14.9g, compared with non-drinkers.

The researchers also say regular moderate drinking reduced all forms of

cardiovascular disease by up to 25%.

However, while consuming small quantities of alcohol had a beneficial effect on

the number of strokes and stroke deaths, the risk increased substantially with

heavier drinking.

Professor William Ghali, from the Institute for Population and Public Health at

the University of Calgary, told the BBC: "Our extensive review shows that

drinking one or one to two drinks would be favourable.

"There is this potentially slippery slope, most notably with social problems

and alcoholic cirrhosis of the liver, but the overall mortality including

cancer and accidents shows you would be better with alcohol."

Moderation

Cathy Ross, senior cardiac nurse at the British Heart Foundation, said: "This

analysis of previous studies supports what we already know about moderate

drinking reducing our risk of cardiovascular disease.

"However, drinking more than sensible amounts of alcohol does not offer any

protection and can cause high blood pressure, stroke, some cancers and damage

to our heart.

"If you don't drink, this is not a reason to start. Similar results can be

achieved by being physically active and eating a balanced and healthy diet."

The researchers believe any beneficial effects are down to the alcohol itself,

rather than anything else in a drink.

Their second study suggests that drinking up to 15g a day for women or 30g for

men increased levels of good cholesterol, adiponectin and apolipoprotein, which

have been linked to a healthy heart.

They said this pattern was true for all types of beverage.

The research group believes that governments may have to change their messages

on public health to argue for drinking alcohol in moderation.

Prof Ghali said: "There's no doubt a public health campaign would be

controversial. We need to ponder the message of how a doctor talks to a patient

and how the government talks to the people."

Professor Lindsey Davies, president of the Faculty of Public Health, added: "It

just strengthens the argument that a little bit does you good, but a lot does

you harm, but that always makes a public health message hard."