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Wine better for heart health than vodka

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A Chinese salesman attends his company's booth selling domestically produced wine at a food fair in Beijing December 3, 2011. Binge-drinking is increasingly common for Chinese professionals, and often it is even in the job description. In China drinkers are older and, in many cases like Japan, Taiwan and South Korea, drinking not just for fun but career reasons. UPI/Stephen Shaver
A Chinese salesman attends his company's booth selling domestically produced wine at a food fair in Beijing December 3, 2011. Binge-drinking is increasingly common for Chinese professionals, and often it is even in the job description. In China drinkers are older and, in many cases like Japan, Taiwan and South Korea, drinking not just for fun but career reasons. UPI/Stephen Shaver 
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Published: Sept. 12, 2012 at 12:22 AM

PROVIDENCE, R.I., Sept. 12 (UPI) -- In a study involving pigs, U.S. researchers found wine has more cardiovascular benefits than vodka because red wine makes blood vessels wider.

The study, published in the journal Circulation, compared the effects of red wine and vodka on pigs with high cholesterol and found the pigs that drank pinot noir fared better than their vodka-swilling swine counterparts.

Dr. Frank Sellke, chief of cardiothoracic surgery at Rhode Island Hospital and The Miriam hospitals, and colleagues said the study involved three groups of swine that had been fed a high-fat diet. One group continued on the diet alone, the second was supplemented daily with red wine, and the third was supplemented daily with vodka. The wine and vodka was mixed with the pigs' food.

After seven weeks, it was determined the subjects that had been given wine or vodka had significantly increased blood flow to the heart, with red wine having the larger cardiovascular benefit.

In addition, high-density lipoprotein, or "good," cholesterol was significantly increased in the two alcohol-treated groups while total cholesterol levels were unaffected. HDL cholesterol transports low-density lipoprotein, the "bad" cholesterol, to the liver, where it is metabolized, which might assist in preventing hardening of the arteries, or atherosclerosis, and other cardiac issues, Sellke said.

© 2012 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any reproduction, republication, redistribution and/or modification of any UPI content is expressly prohibited without UPI's prior written consent.

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