WASHINGTON, Oct. 28 (Xinhua) -- A growing body of
research data suggests that consuming foods rich in polyphenols from grapes,
including red wine, helps reduce the risk of heart disease, according to a
review article in the November issue of Nutrition Research.
"Consumption of grape and grape extracts and/or grape
products such as red wine may be beneficial in preventing the development of
chronic degenerative diseases such as cardiovascular disease," write the authors
from Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization.
The authors review the accumulating evidence that
grape polyphenols work in many different ways to prevent cardiovascular and
other "inflammatory-mediated" diseases.
Polyphenols are natural antioxidants found in grapes
and some other plant foods. Their types and actions vary, depending on where in
the grape they are found. Grape seeds, grape skin, and grape juice contain
several types of polyphenols.
Through their antioxidant effects, grape polyphenols
help to slow or prevent cell damage caused by oxidation. Polyphenols decrease
oxidation of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol ("bad" cholesterol) -- a key
step in the development of atherosclerosis. Grape polyphenols also have other
protective effects on the heart and blood vessels, including actions to reduce
blood clotting, abnormal heart rhythms, and blood vessel narrowing.
It's not yet clear exactly how these benefits of
polyphenols occur, although there is evidence of effects on cellular signaling
and on the actions of certain genes.
The wide range of health-promoting effects suggests
that several different, possibly interrelated mechanisms may be involved, says
the article.
So far, most of the evidence on grape polyphenols
comes from laboratory experiments and animal studies. However, a few studies
support the disease-preventing benefits of grapes in humans. Studies in patients
treated with grape seed extracts have shown improvements in blood flow and
cholesterol levels. In other studies, drinking Concord grape juice has improved
measures of blood flow in patients with coronary artery disease and lowered
blood pressure in patients with hypertension.
At a time of growing interest in the use of
"functional foods and nutraceuticals" to promote heart health, grapes and grape
polyphenols are "attractive candidates" for use in such supplements, the authors
conclude.