World Hot Topics Blog
Can Wine Ward Off Cataracts?
Cataracts are
a threat to the vision of millions, but new study suggests a welcome aid to
prevention: wine.
A few glasses
of alcohol -- especially red wine -- a week may help reduce your risk of
cataract surgery, new British research suggests.
"The
fact that our findings were particularly evident in wine drinkers may suggest a
protective role of polyphenol antioxidants, which are especially abundant in
red wine," said study lead author Sharon Chua, a researcher from
University College London Institute of Ophthalmology. Her team noted that grape
skin is abundant in with healthy antioxidants, an antioxidant-like compound
known as resveratrol, and other heathy chemicals called flavonoids.
Too much
alcohol -- a drink a day or more -- wasn't great for eye health, however. In
heavier drinkers, the odds for cataracts actually began to rise, according to
the study.
Cataracts
often develop with age and occur when the normally clear lens of the eye
becomes clouded.
"Cataracts
are one of the leading causes of reversible vision loss and blurry vision in
the world," said Dr. Matthew Gorski, an ophthalmologist at Northwell
Health in Great Neck, N.Y., who wasn't involved in the new study.
"Symptoms
of cataracts include glare, halos, double vision, loss of contrast sensitivity,
dimness of vision, or difficulty with depth perception and can lead to trouble
reading or difficulty with driving during the day or night," he explained.
"Cataract surgery is the only way to treat cataracts and is a low-risk,
quick and efficient procedure to improve vision."
But could
alcohol intake affect a person's odds for cataracts? To find out, Chua's group
tracked the health and lifestyle of 490,000 people in the United Kingdom.
After taking
into account factors known to affect cataract risk -- age, sex, ethnicity,
socioeconomics, weight, smoking and diabetes -- the researchers found that
people who consumed about 6.5 standard glasses of wine per week (a level that's
within guidelines for safe alcohol intake in the United States and United) were
less likely to undergo cataract surgery.
Compared to
people who abstained or drank other types of alcohol, wine drinkers were
between 14% and 23% less likely to require cataract surgery, the study found.
Compared to people who abstained, moderate drinkers of white wine or champagne had a 10% lower risk, and moderate drinkers of beer and spirits had a 13% and 14% lower risk, respectively.
World Hot Topics Blog
Daily or near
daily consumption of beer or spirits was not associated with a lower risk.
The study
also found that people who had any type of alcohol 1-2 and 3-4 times a week had
a 7% and 6% lower risk of cataract surgery, respectively.
But people
who drank alcohol daily or almost daily were 5% and 6% more likely to have
cataract surgery than those who had alcohol 1-2 times and 3-4 times a week,
respectively.
The study was
published March 31 in the journal Ophthalmology.
The
researchers noted that their findings don't prove cause and effect; it only
shows a strong association between alcohol consumption and cataracts.
"Cataract
development may be due to gradual damage from oxidative stress during
aging," Chua said in a journal news release, so the antioxidants in wine
might help counter that.
Still, Gorski
agreed that the research couldn't prove alcohol promotes eye health.
"I think
that this is an important study, however further studies are necessary to see
if the findings will be repeated," he cautioned. "At this time, I
will certainly not be telling my patients to drink small amounts of alcohol in
order to decrease the chance of cataract surgery."
Dr. Mark
Fromer is an ophthalmologist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City. Reading
over the findings, he agreed that "further studies will be necessary to
determine whether this association is causal in nature. If, in fact, low to
moderate levels of alcohol intake has a causal effect on the reduction of
cataract formation, it is likely that it occurs over a long period of
time."
This World Hot Topics Blog is Originally from here :
https://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=253995
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