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Alcohol Cuts Diabetes Risk In
Older Women
New York -
Drinking moderate amounts of alcohol appears to protect older women
from developing type 2 or non-insulin-dependent diabetes, Dutch
researchers report.
Although an association between
alcohol use and reduced diabetes risk has been observed previously,
much exploration of this topic has centered on men and few studies
have involved older women, Dr. Michiel L. Bots of University Medical
Center Utrecht and colleagues note in the journal Diabetes Care.
Because diabetes increases with age
and most type 2 diabetic patients are women, they investigated the
relationship between alcohol and diabetes onset in older women. The
team examined data from a cohort of more than 16,300 women aged 49 to
70 years who were diabetes-free at enrollment and were followed for an
average of 6.2 years.
During this period, 760 women were
diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. Compared with abstainers, women
consuming moderate amounts of alcohol (5 to 30 grams per week) were
much less likely to develop diabetes. Ten grams of alcohol constitutes
one standard drink. There was no association with type of drink.
Lifetime alcohol consumption was associated with type 2 diabetes in a
U-shaped fashion — in that it was increased in abstainers and
excessive drinkers in comparison with those with moderate consumption.
The investigators note that their
data “agree with previous observations and expand this evidence to
older women and lifetime alcohol consumption.” -- Reuters
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