Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Diabetic? Daily Glass Of Red Wine Can Improve Heart Health

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Oct, 2015 11:31 AM
  • Diabetic? Daily Glass Of Red Wine Can Improve Heart Health
A glass of red wine every night may help people with Type-2 diabetes manage their cholesterol and cardiac health, suggests new research.
 
People with diabetes are more susceptible to developing cardiovascular diseases than the general population and have lower levels of "good" cholesterol, the study said.
 
"Initiating moderate wine intake, especially red wine, among well-controlled diabetics, as part of a healthy diet, is apparently safe, and modestly decreases cardio-metabolic risk,” the study said.
 
Additionally, both red and white wine can improve sugar control, depending on alcohol metabolism genetic profile, the findings showed.
 
While slow alcohol-metabolisers who drank wine achieved an improvement in blood sugar control, fast alcohol-metabolisers (with much faster blood alcohol clearance) did not benefit from the ethanol's glucose control effect.
 
The study led by researchers at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) in Beersheba, Israel aimed to assess the effects and safety of initiating moderate alcohol consumption in diabetics, and sought to determine whether the type of wine matters.
 
The two-year trial was performed on 224 controlled diabetes patients (aged 45 to 75), who generally abstained from alcohol. 
 
 
They gradually initiated moderate wine consumption, as part of a healthy diet platform, and not before driving.
 
"Red wine was found to be superior in improving overall metabolic profiles, mainly by modestly improving the lipid profile, by increasing good (high-density lipoprotein or HDL) cholesterol, while decreasing the ratio between total cholesterol and HDL cholesterol," the study said.
 
"The differences found between red and white wine were opposed to our original hypothesis that the beneficial effects of wine are mediated predominantly by the alcohol,” principal investigator Iris Shai said.
 
"Approximately 150 ml of the dry red or white tested wines contained approximately 17 g ethanol and approximately 120 kilocalorie, but the red wine had seven-fold higher levels of total phenols and four to 13-fold higher levels of the specific resveratrol group compounds than the white wine,” Shai pointed out, underlining the effects of non-alcoholic constituents of red wines. 
 
The study was published in the journal Annals of Internal Medicine.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Ditch Ready-to-eat Meals To Avoid High Calories

Ditch Ready-to-eat Meals To Avoid High Calories
Do you want to help trim yours and your family’s waistlines? One can save over a month’s worth of calories every year by ditching 'ready meals' and instead taking a Do it Yourself (DIY) approach to making common foods.

Ditch Ready-to-eat Meals To Avoid High Calories

Second-hand Smoke Leads To Obesity

Second-hand Smoke Leads To Obesity
Debunking a long-held popular belief that smoking cigarettes helps keep one slim, researchers have now found that even second hand exposure to cigarette smoke can cause weight gain.

Second-hand Smoke Leads To Obesity

Copper could help prevent Ebola spread

Copper could help prevent Ebola spread
Replacing frequently-touched surfaces, such as door handles, taps and light switches, with solid copper or copper alloy equivalents could be an...

Copper could help prevent Ebola spread

Inhaled Ebola vaccine could offer long-term protection

Inhaled Ebola vaccine could offer long-term protection
A single dose of a breathable, respiratory vaccine could provide long-term protection against the deadly Ebola virus, new research shows....

Inhaled Ebola vaccine could offer long-term protection

Sugar-rich fat maintains supply of brain stem cells

Sugar-rich fat maintains supply of brain stem cells
Fat and sugar are considered to be the culprits when it comes to obesity and related health complications but if researchers are to be believed...

Sugar-rich fat maintains supply of brain stem cells

Defective nerve insulation triggers migraine

Defective nerve insulation triggers migraine
The unbearable headache that migraine patients suffer is due to cellular-level changes in nerve structure, says a study....

Defective nerve insulation triggers migraine