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Why beer may deter blood clots. (Food & Nutrition).


Downing a beer a day alters the structure of fibrinogen Fibrinogen

The major clot-forming substrate in the blood plasma of vertebrates. Though fibrinogen represents a small fraction of plasma proteins (normal human plasma has a fibrinogen content of 2–4 mg/ml of a total of 70 mg protein/ml), its conversion
, a blood protein active in clotting. The preliminary finding by an international research team could be good news for people with artery-narrowing atherosclerosis. They might be able to diminish their risk of heart attacks and strokes by routinely lifting a mug.

For their investigation, Shela Gorinstein of the Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical School in Jerusalem and her colleagues recruited 48 men who had just recovered from coronary-artery-bypass surgery. Half received 12 ounces of pale lager Pale lager is a very pale to golden-coloured beer with a well attenuated body and noble hop bitterness. The brewing process for this beer developed in the mid 1800s when Gabriel Sedlmayr took pale ale brewing techniques back to the Spaten Brewery in Germany and applied it to  every day for a month; the rest got an equivalent amount of mineral water. All participants ate a roughly 1,700-calorie daily diet rich in fruits, vegetables, and olive oil olive oil, pale yellow to greenish oil obtained from the pulp of olives by separating the liquids from solids. Olive oil was used in the ancient world for lighting, in the preparation of food, and as an anointing oil for both ritual and cosmetic purposes. .

When Gorinstein's team compared blood samples from each recruit both before and at the end of the trial, big changes emerged--but only in the men drinking beer. Not only did about 10 percent of their clot-promoting fibrinogen disappear, but more detailed analyses also revealed that much of the remaining fibrinogen underwent structural changes that compromise the clotting process.

The end result: The men should be less prone to cardiovascular disease Cardiovascular disease
Disease that affects the heart and blood vessels.

Mentioned in: Lipoproteins Test

cardiovascular disease 
 stemming in part from clots, Gorinstein says. Her team reports its findings in the Jan. 29 Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.

Earlier work by the group suggests that at least some of the newfound fibrinogen effects trace to polyphenols--pigmented antioxidant antioxidant, substance that prevents or slows the breakdown of another substance by oxygen. Synthetic and natural antioxidants are used to slow the deterioration of gasoline and rubber, and such antioxidants as vitamin C (ascorbic acid), butylated hydroxytoluene  compounds in beer, tea, wine, and fruit juices. Moreover, the team's earlier studies of people with high cholesterol Cholesterol, High Definition

Cholesterol is a fatty substance found in animal tissue and is an important component to the human body. It is manufactured in the liver and carried throughout the body in the bloodstream.
 showed that regular, moderate beer drinking lowered their total cholesterol by about 25 percent and their low-density (bad) cholesterol by more than 27 percent.--J.R.
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Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:7ISRA
Date:Mar 8, 2003
Words:269
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