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 Red wine Information - July 20, 2008
| Green tea appears to have a short-term health benefits on the large arteries of the heart, a Greek study has shown. The study found that the consumption of green tea rapidly improves the function of (endothelial) cells lining the circulatory system; endothelial dysfunction is a key event in the progression of atherosclerosis. The study by Dr. Nikolaos Alexopoulos and colleagues in the cardiology department of Athens Medical School found that green tea rapidly improves the function of endothelial cells lining the suggests endothelium-dependent brachial artery dilatation increased significantly after drinking green tea | | A compound found in grapes and red wine has been seen to help with age-related health concerns, a new Harvard study has found. When studied on lab mice, the compound, known as resveratrol provided heart benefits, enabling stronger bones and preventing eye cataracts; researchers said on Thursday. David Sinclair of Harvard Medical School and Rafael de Cabo of the National Institute on Aging placed 1-year-old mice on low-calorie diets and high-calorie diets along with low or high resveratrol doses. The higher resveratrol and higher-calorie diets had similar effects to low-calorie diets and low-resveratrol diets in terms of health benefits | | A Mediterranean diet which consists of fruits, vegetables, fibre and healthier fats could help protect against Type 2 diabetes, a new study suggests. The diet has already been proved famously beneficial for the cardiovascular system. Researchers at the University of Navarra in northern Spain studied the eating habits of more than 14,000 Spanish volunteers over four years to see who developed the condition. Their health and dietary habits were then tracked in detail over the following months and years | | Sipping a cup of specially formulated cocoa can help ward off diabetes and other cardiovascular disease, new research has found. The German study says flavanols present in cocoa can actually help blood vessels to function better and might soon be considered part of a healthy diet for the prevention of cardiovascular disease. When researchers from University Hospital Aachen and the Technical University Aachen, in Aachen, Germany prescribed three mugs of specially formulated cocoa a day for a month, they found "severely impaired" arteries regained normal function. Flavanols, natural plant compounds also found in tea, red wine, and certain fruits and vegetables, are responsible for cocoa's healthful benefits | | A new study shows that resveratrol, the antioxidant found in red wine, kills cancer cells from the inside and improves the effectiveness of radiation and chemotherapy cancer treatments. Researchers, led by Paul Okunieff, M.D., chief of Radiation Oncology at the James P. Wilmot Cancer Center at the University of Rochester Medical Center, showed that the natural antioxidant from grape skins and red wine crippled the function of pancreatic cancer cell's core energy source or mitochondria | |
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