Related: Moderate drinking may not protect heart:
study
 |
| A glass of wine a day could be combatting
obesity. |
Beijing, Dec. 6 (Xinhuanet)-- One
or two alcoholic drinks a day may drop the risk of becoming obese, a US
study suggested Monday.
Researchers found that among more than
8,200 US adults, those who said they enjoyed a drink every day were 54 percent
less likely than non-drinkers to be obese. Similarly, those who drank a little
more (two drinks per day) or a little less (a few drinks per week) had a lower
risk of obesity than teetotalers did.
"We were surprised to find that people
who were moderate drinkers were less likely to be obese," said study co-author
Dr. James Rohrer, from the department of family medicine at the Mayo Clinic.
"We don't want to give the wrong
impression," Rohrer continued. "We certainly don't want to recommend that
nondrinkers become drinkers just to try to control their weight."
In their study, Rohrer and his
colleague, Ahmed Arif, from Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center,
collected data on 8,236 nonsmokers who participated in the National Health and
Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) III. These people had also answered
questions about their drinking habits and their body mass index was measured.
Because of the study's cross-sectional
nature, no cause-and-effect relationship between alcohol and overweight or
obesity could be established, the researchers said.
"Actively promoting moderate use of
alcohol as a strategy to combat obesity would be inappropriate at this early
stage of our understanding about the underlying mechanisms that link alcohol use
with weight control," the study authors said.
Their report appears in the Dec. 4
online issue of BMC Public Health. Enditem
(Agencies)