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Drinking to excess cuts risk to heart for men

By Jeremy Laurence

Thursday November 19 2009

DRINKING a bottle of wine a day, or half a dozen beers, cuts the risk of heart disease by more than half in men, it has been shown.

In one of the largest studies of the link between alcohol and heart disease, researchers have found that the protective effects of a daily tipple are not limited to those who drink moderately but also extend to those who consume at what are conventionally considered to be dangerously high levels.

The researchers, from the public health department of the Basque government in San Sebastian, Spain, warned that alcohol caused millions of deaths a year worldwide from other causes and that their findings should not be taken as a licence to drink to oblivion. British scientists said the study, published in the journal Heart, was "flawed".

The research was conducted among 15,000 men and 26,000 women aged from 29 to 69 who were followed for 10 years.

The results showed that those who drank a little -- a glass of wine or a bottle of beer every other day -- had a 35pc lower risk of a heart attack than those who never drank. Moderate drinkers, consuming up to a couple of glasses of wine a day or a couple of pints of ordinary bitter, had a 54pc lower risk.

Heavy drinkers consuming up to a bottle of wine or six pints of ordinary bitter had a 50pc reduction in risk of a heart attack to moderate drinkers. Those drinking at even higher levels were half as likely to suffer a heart attack as teetotallers.

Larraitz Arriola, who led the study, said alcohol caused 1.8 million deaths a year around the world and 55,000 deaths among people under 30 in Europe alone. "The first thing to say about our research is that alcohol is very harmful. If you drink heavily, you should drink moderately. The more you drink, the worse off you will be."

Protective

The researchers only looked at the effect of alcohol on the heart and confirmed what 30 years of studies have shown -- that it is protective. The effect was independent of the form in which the alcohol was taken. However, people who only drank wine had slightly less protection.

British specialists said the protective effect was only seen in men over 40. Robert Sutton, professor of surgery at the University of Liverpool, said: "This study suffers from several flaws, so cannot be taken to suggest that high levels of alcohol intake can improve health.

"Most importantly, all other alcohol-related diseases were completely ignored so that it is a highly biased view of the effects of alcohol." (© Independent News Service)

- Jeremy Laurence

Irish Independent