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Older Men Who Drink Regularly, Heavily Increase Risk
of Stroke
Red wine appears to offer slight protection, more
than other types of alcohol
Jan. 4, 2005 – Older men who regularly drink three
or more alcoholic drinks per day are much more likely to have a stroke
than are
nondrinkers, and moderate amounts of alcohol show only slight evidence
of providing protection, according to a study published today.
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About Stroke |
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Every 45 seconds, someone in
America has a stroke. About 700,000 Americans will have a
stroke this year. Stroke is our nation's No. 3 killer and a
leading cause of severe, long-term disability.
What is Stroke?
Stroke is a type of
cardiovascular disease. It affects the arteries leading to and
within the brain. A stroke occurs when a blood vessel that
carries oxygen and nutrients to the brain is either blocked by a
clot or bursts. When that happens, part of the brain cannot get
the blood (and oxygen) it needs, so it starts to die.
Clots that block an artery cause
ischemic (is-KEM-ik) strokes. This is the most common type
of stroke, accounting for approximately 88 percent of all
strokes.
Ruptured blood vessels cause
hemorrhagic (hem-o-RAJ-ik) or bleeding strokes.
When part of the brain dies from
lack of blood flow, the part of the body it controls is
affected. Strokes can cause paralysis, affect language and
vision, and cause other problems.
Treatments are available to minimize the potentially
devastating
effects of stroke, but to receive them, one must recognize
the
warning signs and act quickly!
Information from
American Stroke Asscoation. |
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This study, led by researchers at Beth Israel
Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) and the Harvard School of Public Health
(HSPH), studied men between the ages of 40 and 75, and found that heavy
drinkers -- men who consume an average of three or more alcoholic
beverages per day -- are nearly 45 percent more likely to suffer an
ischemic stroke (particularly embolic stroke) compared with nondrinkers.
This finding, says lead author Kenneth Mukamal, MD,
MPH, a general internist at BIDMC and Assistant Professor of Medicine at
Harvard Medical School, may be attributable to alcohol’s association
with both high blood pressure and atrial fibrillation.
The study also found that while light and moderate
drinkers appear to be at neither greater risk nor greater advantage than
abstainers when it comes to ischemic stroke, the frequency with which
they consume alcohol may modestly influence their risk.
Their findings showed that men whose average
alcohol intake was three or more drinks per day had a 42 percent higher
risk of ischemic stroke (particularly embolic stroke) than did
abstainers. This finding, says Mukamal, may be attributable to alcohol’s
association with both high blood pressure and atrial fibrillation.
Although the findings also found that average intake of lower amounts of
alcohol was associated with neither a significantly higher nor lower
risk of stroke, when drinking frequency was taken into account, the
light and moderate drinkers who consumed alcohol three to four days per
week had a modest 32 percent lower stroke risk than did nondrinkers.
The author said his term "modest" for the 32 percent lower risk was a
matter of opinion.
“I think there has been a subtle assumption that
moderate drinking is associated with a lower risk of ischemic stroke,
similar to the way that it is associated with a lower risk of heart
attack,” says Mukamal.
“But our study did not demonstrate a statistically
significant role for alcohol in guarding against stroke. While there
does appear to be a small window for which light drinking is associated
with lower risk, it’s important to note that this window is smaller than
it is for heart disease and therefore you cannot simply extrapolate
between the two.”
Mukamal notes that red wine appeared to offer
slightly more protection than other types of alcohol, with red-wine
drinkers shown to be at 23 percent lower risk of ischemic stroke.
(Intake of one or more glasses per day was linked to a 46 percent lower
risk, but few men in this study drank red wine on a daily basis, he
adds.)
“Compared with other types of alcohol, red wine was
associated with a step-wise lower risk of ischemic stroke,” according to
Mukamal. “This is curious, because among this population of men, red
wine is not linked to a lower risk of heart disease any more than any
other type of alcohol, so it’s unclear why this would be the case with
stroke.” He adds that further research will be needed to help clarify
this finding.
For now, the standard recommendation that men drink
no more than two drinks per drinking day still appears to be a good one,
say the authors.
“Our findings directly support current public
health recommendations stating that men should consume less than two
drinks per day,” the authors write. “At the same time, our findings
support the safety of continued light alcohol consumption among adults
who have been able to appropriately regulate the quality and timing of
their alcohol use.”
The findings, reported in the January 4, 2005 issue
of the Annals of Internal Medicine, help shed light on a subject
that has been the source of some confusion, and reinforce the importance
of what the authors call “drinking patterns,” the number of days per
week that alcohol is consumed and the amount consumed on drinking days.
“In this study, the participants who were at lowest
risk for stroke were the men who consumed one or two drinks on three to
four days of the week,” says Mukamal.
“The importance of drinking pattern for stroke risk
parallels our previous findings among this same group of men regarding
alcohol consumption and the risk of developing diabetes and coronary
heart disease. Among all three types of disease, the lowest risk seems
to occur when consumption is limited to one or, at most, two drinks,
approximately every other day, with little benefit shown above three to
four drinking days per week, he added.”
Nearly 700,000 individuals in the U.S. suffer an
ischemic stroke each year. Sometimes referred to as a “brain attack,”
the condition develops when an artery in the brain becomes blocked by a
blood clot.
There are two types of ischemic stroke:
1. thrombotic, which results from the
development of a blood clot within the brain itself, and
2. embolic, which is the result of a clot
traveling through the bloodstream from another part of the body and
becoming lodged in the brain.
In both instances, the ensuing deprivation of
oxygen and nutrients to the brain can result in neurological damage or
death.
During the course of the 14-year study the authors
followed 38,156 participants who are part of the HSPH-based Health
Professionals Follow-up Study. Beginning in 1986 and continuing every
four years thereafter until 2000, the male participants, who ranged in
age from 40 to 75, responded to a detailed questionnaire regarding diet
and medical history, including alcohol consumption.
The researchers examined the following factors to
gauge the influence of alcohol consumption on the risk for ischemic
stroke: average amount of alcohol consumed; drinking patterns (number of
days per week alcohol was consumed); and type of beverage consumed
(beer, red wine, white wine, or spirits). They also looked at the
incidence of both subtypes of ischemic stroke – thrombotic and embolic.
During the course of the study, they confirmed 412 cases of ischemic
stroke among the study participants.
Study coauthors include senior author Eric Rimm,
ScD, Walter Willett, MD, DrPH, Alberto Ascherio, MD, DrPH, Ichiro
Kawachi, MD, PhD, and Meir Stampfer, MD, DrPH, of the Harvard School of
Public Health; Murray Mittleman, MD, DrPH, of Beth Israel Deaconess
Medical Center; Katherine Conigrave, MD, of Royal Prince Albert
Hospital, Camperdown, Australia; and Carlos Camargo Jr., MD, DrPH, of
Massachusetts General Hospital.
This study was supported by grants from the
National Institutes of Health.
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center is a patient
care, teaching and research affiliate of Harvard Medical School, and
ranks third in National Institutes of Health funding among independent
hospitals nationwide. BIDMC is clinically affiliated with the Joslin
Diabetes Center and is a research partner of Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer
Center. BIDMC is the official hospital of the Boston Red Sox. For more
information, visit www.bidmc.harvard.edu.
Harvard School of Public Health is dedicated to
advancing the public’s health through learning, discovery, and
communication. More than 300 faculty members are engaged in teaching and
training the 800-plus student body in a broad spectrum of disciplines
crucial to the health and well-being of individuals and populations
around the world. Programs and projects range from the molecular biology
of AIDS vaccines to the epidemiology of cancer; from risk analysis to
violence prevention; from maternal and children’s health to quality of
care measurement; from health care management to international health
and human rights.
http://www.hsph.harvard.edu.
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