LOS ANGELES, Aug. 1 (Xinhua) -- Red wine's health
benefits lie in resveratrol which works as an effective therapy for
life-threatening inflammation, a new study has found.
The study not only explains resveratrol's one-two
punch on inflammation, but also shows how it, or a derivative, can be used to
treat potentially deadly inflammatory disease, such as appendicitis,
peritonitis, and systemic sepsis, said a team of scientists from Scotland and
Singapore.
The study was published in the August 2009 print
issue of Journal of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental
Biology (The FASEB Journal) .
In the study, the researchers administered an
inflammatory agent to two groups of mice. One group was pretreated with
resveratrol and the other group was not. The mice that were not pretreated with
resveratrol experienced a strong inflammatory response, simulating disease in
humans, while the group pretreated with resveratrol was protected from the
inflammation.
The scientists then examined the tissues of the mice
to determine exactly how resveratrol was able to protect the mice from
inflammation. They found that resveratrol used a one-two punch to stop
inflammation in the mice by preventing the body from creating two different
molecules known to trigger inflammation, sphingosine kinase and phospholipase D.
This finding suggests that resveratrol may be
harnessable as a treatment for inflammatory diseases and may also lead to
entirely new resveratrol-based drugs that are even more effective, said the
researchers.
"Strong acute inflammatory diseases such as sepsis
are very difficult to treat and many die every day due to lack of treatment, "
said Alirio Melendez, senior lecturer on the faculty of medicine at Glasgow
Biomedical Research Centre in Scotland and one of the researchers involved in
the work.
"Moreover, many survivors of sepsis develop a very
low quality of life due to the damage that inflammation causes to several
internal organs. The ultimate goal of our study was to identify a potential
novel therapy to help in the treatment of strong acute inflammatory diseases,"
he added.
"The therapeutic potential of red wine has
been bottled up for thousands of years," said Gerald Weissmann, M.D.,
Editor-in-Chief of The FASEB Journal, "and now that scientists have uncorked its
secrets, they find that studies of how resveratrol works can lead to new
treatments for life-threatening inflammation."