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Wine lowers heart attack risk
28/12/2000 14:04  - (SA)  

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New York - Antioxidant compounds found in tea, wine, fruits and vegetables may lower the risk of having a non-fatal heart attack for some men but they do not appear to offer protection against more deadly episodes, researchers report.

Antioxidants are compounds found in foods that combat the effects of free radicals, which are naturally-occurring particles that can contribute to chronic disease and ageing.

Studies have shown that the antioxidants known as flavonols and flavones can mop up free radicals, reducing the risk of stroke and reducing the effects of LDL, or "bad'' cholesterol.

To investigate whether they offered any protection against heart attack, researchers analysed the diets of more than 25,000 male smokers aged 50-69 years with no history of heart attack.

According to the findings, published in the January issue of Epidemiology, men who consumed the greatest amount of these compounds had a slightly lower risk of having a nonfatal heart attack six years later, compared with men who consumed the lowest amount each day.

But there was only a weak association between these compounds and death from heart attack, conclude Dr. Tero Hirvonen, from the National Public Health Institute in Helsinki, Finland, and colleagues.

Their finding contradicts previous studies, which have shown a stronger relationship between the antioxidant compounds and death from heart attack. The authors note that the average levels of flavonols and flavones consumed in their study were low, compared with levels consumed in other trials, possibly because consumption of tea and wine in Finland is generally low.

Individuals in the present study also smoked and "it is possible that the effects of flavonoids are different between smokers and non-smokers,'' researchers suggest.

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