Research
Immune System Boosting
Red Wine Can Help Maintain Immune System, UF Researcher
Finds
8-6-1999
GAINESVILLE---Unlike many other alcoholic beverages,
red wine does not suppress the immune system, according
to preliminary studies at the University of Florida.
While red wine has been reported to aid in the prevention
of coronary heart disease and some cancers, no one has
studied whether its alcohol content might offset any
benefits, said food science and human nutrition researcher
Susan Percival.
So
Percival, who specializes in nutrition and immunity,
conducted a study to find out if red wine affects the
immune system. Her research shows that the circulating
white blood cells that fight infection are not helped
-- or hurt -- by red wine.
"There's
been a lot of publicity lately on the health benefits
of red wine, but we also know that alcohol suppresses
the immune system," said Percival, a researcher
in UF's Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences.
"So we wanted to find out whether red wine had
a suppressive effect on immunity."
In
the eight-week study, laboratory mice were divided into
four groups of drinkers: teetotalers, who drank only
water; wine drinkers, with one group getting cabernet
sauvignon and the other getting muscadine wine; and
ethanol drinkers, who received alcohol in concentrations
equivalent to that in the wine.
The
study was designed to replicate moderate alcohol consumption
for people, so the mice were given the equivalent of
two or three glasses, or servings, of wine or alcohol
per day.
After
the mice had established a drinking habit, Percival
made the mice mildly ill to see how their immune systems
would respond under the influence of alcohol.
The
mice who were drinking ethanol experienced a suppressed immune
response, while the mice who drank wine maintained normal immunity.
"We
found that the animals that consumed straight ethanol had lower
levels of white blood cells than any other group," Percival
said. "However, the same amount of alcohol, consumed as red
wine, resulted in no suppression of the immune response.
"What
this suggests," Percival said, "is that there's something
in red wine that prevents suppression of the immune system. So
it's OK to drink a glass of red wine. You can get the benefits
without any apparent harm on immunity."
Percival
said there are many different compounds in red wine and in grapes
that could be contributing to the results, but she has not yet
pinpointed which specific compound aids in maintaining normal
immunity. The rich pigment in red wine is due to antioxidants
and blood tests showed that mice who drank wine had two times
more antioxidant capacity than the animals who drank ethanol or
water.
Percival
used cabernet sauvignon and muscadine wine to see if the variety
of wine affected the immune response. The cabernet grapes came
from California and the muscadine grapes from a local vineyard
in North Central Florida. The wines were made at the food science
and human nutrition department by researcher Charlie Sims.
Percival
said she found the comparison of muscadine and cabernet inconclusive.
Tests of enzymes in the liver, which detoxifies alcohol for the
body, showed some differences between how the liver processed
the two wines. Percival said she hopes to do further studies to
determine whether muscadine might have greater protective effects
because of its greater concentration of antioxidants.
"I
was surprised to find no immune system suppression from the red
wine, and we still don't know what it is that prevented the suppression,"
Percival said. "So we'd like to take this further and eventually
look at this process in people."
This
story has been adapted from a news release issued by Institute
Of Food And Agricultural Sciences, University Of Florida, www.ifas.ufl.edu.
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