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Since the 1980’s, clinicians and researchers have been puzzled by the “French paradox”: the observation that residents of France have a surprisingly low incidence of cardiovascular disease given their high rates of smoking, intakes of saturated fat, and hypercholesterolemia (i.e. abnormally high serum levels of harmful low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol). A recent study now offers evidence that the negative health impacts of these common risk factors might be effectively mitigated by the French habit of regular red wine consumption.

The authors of this study examined mice that had been genetically modified to lack LDL receptors – proteins crucial for removing LDLs from the bloodstream and initiating their degradation. This genetic modification, known as a “knock-out”, meant that the mice experienced a virtually life-long state of hypercholesterolemia, which served as the biological backdrop for an experiment on the potential health effects of wine consumption.

At the age of three months (early mouse adulthood), animals were randomly assigned to receive 60 days of unlimited access to either plain tap water or red wine diluted to yield a 6% ethanol solution. This concentration ensured that the animals consumed the human equivalent of a 5-ounce glass of wine on a daily basis.

When the researchers tested the mice on a variety of cognitive tasks, they discovered that the water-only group displayed learning and memory impairments characteristic of their poor lipid profiles. Their performance was particularly poor on a short-term memory test, where the animals turned out to be unable to recognize objects they had seen only an hour prior. Long-term memory retention was also compromised. In a test that required the animals to remember the location of an escape platform hidden in a tub of opaque water, the mice swam in the right direction only 20 percent of the time.

Interestingly, wine-consuming mice were not impaired to the same degree. And while their plasma lipid profiles were no better compared to their water-drinking peers, they had substantially lower levels of several biomarkers of neuroinflammation, such as GFAP and lectin. The findings indicate that red wine compounds might help protect against the negative health outcomes of hypercholesterolemia by interfering with the associated inflammatory processes.

Link to full study.

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