Grape Juice, Wine and Resveratrol Antioxidant
No doubt you've all heard about red wine being good for you
(in moderation, of course). But, what is it that gives red wine
and grape its juice potential health benefits? Once again, it's
an antioxidant, this one called "resveratrol."
A Toast to Resveratrol, an
Amazing
Grape Antioxidant
Author: Dr. Paul Gross
One of the most well-known stories about the health benefits
of eating fruit is called the French Paradox - the condition of
unexpected low incidence of cardiovascular disease in French
citizens who regularly eat extraordinary quantities of high-fat
foods and consume red wine. These people technically should
have high rates of cardiovascular disease but seem protected by
the chemicals in wine.
Although we now recognize that high-fat diets are
undesirable, the potential benefits of a diet rich in whole
food phytochemicals are clear when combined with other healthy
dietary and lifestyle practices, such as maintaining a regular
exercise program.
Possibly the most publicized phytochemical in red wine is
resveratrol found in the skin and seeds of red and purple
grapes and dark berries like the blueberry. Having the chemical
formula C14H12O3, resveratrol is chemically defined as a
stilbene, viniferin or phytoalexin (a Greek-derived term
meaning to "protect" (alexin) or to "ward off").
This designation suits the function of resveratrol in the
outer skin of plants as a primary fungicide and antiviral agent
with potent antioxidant properties protecting against
ultraviolet radiation, pests and injury. Resveratrol belongs to
the general class of plant chemicals called phenolics or
polyphenols, named from their composition of carbon, hydrogen
and oxygen atoms in 6-carbon rings.
Benefits of Resveratrol
By consuming blue, red, purple and black-skinned plants rich
in resveratrol, humans may gain these protective benefits.
Early medical research proves this to be true, as resveratrol
has been shown in preliminary research on experimental animals
to:
- Increase blood flow and reduce the extent of brain cell
damage following stroke
- Reduce the activity of brain inflammatory mediators in
a model of Alzheimer's disease
- Reduce vascular plaque formation in rats given a
high-fat diet
- Improve the rate of healing in skin wounds
- Protect against lipid oxidation in a model of
pancreatitis
- Protect against cellular pathology in a model of
diabetic kidney disease
- Protect against liver damage in a model of cholestasis
or bile duct occlusion
- Protect against cartilage deterioration in a model of
osteoarthritis
- Stimulate anti-clotting mechanisms in blood
- Suppress appetite and in turn contribute to weight
control or loss
- Enhance sperm production
- Inhibit formation of cataracts
- Inhibit proliferation of the herpes simplex virus
- Prolong the lives of yeast cells, worms, fish and fruit
flies, possibly through mechanisms that affect aging via
slowing the rate of cell death
Anti-Cancer Effect
Resveratrol's most compelling health effect shown in
laboratory studies is its broad-spectrum anti-cancer activity.
The online database of medical literature for the US National
Institutes of Health, PubMed, cites nearly 500 publications
over the past decade of research on resveratrol as a cancer
chemopreventive nutrient.
Experimental models of breast, prostate, lung, blood, skin,
brain, kidney, bladder, tongue, esophagus and colon cancer show
evidence for beneficial effects of resveratrol. It appears also
to sensitize cells toward cancer therapy agents, improving the
benefit of these drugs. Also, when combined with other
plant-derived phenolics, resveratrol's anti-cancer actions seem
to be enhanced, showing the potential benefits of antioxidant
synergy from a mixed diet high in colorful fruits and
vegetables rich in phytochemicals.
Resveratrol's actions to inhibit inflammatory mediators and
the growth of new blood vessels in tumors (called
anti-angiogenesis), plus its ability to accelerate the rate of
cancer cell death (called apoptosis, "eh-po-toe-sis"), are
synergistic effects in anti-cancer activity. In other
experiments, resveratrol inhibited enzymes synthesizing
nitro-oxygen radicals like nitric oxide that may be involved in
cancer development.
To summarize, resveratrol acts against mechanisms
controlling the initiation, promotion and progression of tumor
cell growth in laboratory models. It is considered one of the
most promising natural anti-cancer agents.
Fortunately for us, resveratrol can be easily introduced
into the diet by selecting foods like:
- Red grapes and dark grape juice
- Red wines (and even white ones, but with lower
resveratrol levels)
- Blackberries, blueberries, cranberries and
lingonberries (and their juices)
- Pistachios oPeanuts with skins and peanut butter
Take home message: Eat berries! Drink red wine! And be
merry!
Reading
PubMed at http://pubmed.gov;
type "resveratrol AND" in the search space, add the topic of
your interest, and click on Go to view literature.
Linus Pauling Institute, Micronutrient Information Center,
Oregon State University, Corvallis, http://lpi.oregonstate.edu/infocenter/
Copyright 2006 Berry Health Inc.
About the author: Dr. Paul Gross is a scientist and expert
on cardiovascular and brain physiology. A published researcher,
Gross recently completed a book on the Chinese wolfberry and
has begun another on antioxidant berries. Gross is founder of
Berry Health Inc, a developer of nutritional, berry-based
supplements. For more information, visit http://www.berrywiseonline.com
Synonyms: Esveratrol, ersveratrol, rresveratrol,
rsveratrol, rseveratrol, reesveratrol, reveratrol, revseratrol,
ressveratrol, reseratrol, resevratrol, resvveratrol,
resvratrol, resvreatrol, resveeratrol, resveatrol, resveartrol,
resverratrol, resvertrol, resvertarol, resveraatrol,
resverarol, resverartol, resverattrol, resveratol, resveratorl,
resveratrrol, resveratrl, resveratrlo, resveratrool,
resveratro, and resveratroll are typos and common mispellings
for resveratrol.
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