A Greater Than Previously Thought Link Between Alcohol And Blood Pressure Found
Main Category: HypertensionAlso Included In: Alcohol / Addiction / Illegal Drugs; Genetics
Article Date: 04 Mar 2008 - 2:00 PDT
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Previous observational studies have reported that heavy alcohol intake is a risk factor for hypertension but such studies may be confounded by factors such as diet, smoking, exercise levels and socio-economic position. Clinical trials exploring the link are difficult to implement and have limited follow-up time.
The Bristol study, led by Dr Sarah Lewis of the University's Department of Social Medicine, took a different approach focused on people who have a mutation on a gene which affects their body's ability to eliminate alcohol.
Alcohol is initially metabolised to an intermediate compound, acetaldehyde, which is further metabolised and then eliminated from the body. The major enzyme responsible for this elimination is alcohol dehydrohenase 2 (ALDH2).
In some people, a genetic mutation leads to an inability to metabolize acetaldehyde and causes an accumulation of acetaldehyde after alcohol intake. This mutation is common in some Asian populations and results in facial flushing after consumption of alcohol coupled with intense nausea, drowsiness, headache and other unpleasant symptoms. People with this mutation therefore drink much less than those without it
The researchers looked at the ALDH2 genotype, comparing the blood pressure of those who have this mutation - the *2 *2 genotype - with those who do not - the *1 *1 genotype.
The study found that individuals with the *1 *1 genotype, who had an alcohol intake of around 3 units per day, had strikingly higher blood pressure than those with the *2 *2 genotype, who tend to drink only very small amounts, or no alcohol.
Dr Lewis said: "This study shows that alcohol intake may increase blood pressure to a much greater extent, even among moderate drinkers, than previously thought. Large-scale replication studies are required to confirm this finding and to improve the precision of our estimates."
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Source: Hannah Johnson
University of Bristol
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Alcoholic Confusion
posted by Dr Sinclair on 4 Mar 2008 at 8:47 amThis article about alcohol, addiction and genetics is a little unclear.
Alcohol is metabolised in the liver in a 2 stage process
Alcohol is converted to acetaldehyde by the enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase
Acetaldehyde is then destroyed by aldehyde dehydrogenase
A mutation of Alcohol dehyrogenase that has reduce activity would lower the production of Acetaldehyde. Acetaldehyde is toxiv and has very unpleasant side effects that include severe flushing, headaches, rapid pulse and drowsiness.
A person suffering from such an enzyme mutant will tend to avoid alcohol, in order to avoid this unpleasantness. Such mutants are common [but not exclusive] to Asians, which explains why so many of them [and others] react badly to alcohol in this way.
These adverse reactions do not stop all Asians from drinking alcohol, even if they have the mutation.
Therefore, alcohol addiction has a great deal more to it than a single enzyme mutation.
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