Abstract
Objective: To study how the intake of alcohol and the choice of wine, beer, and spirits is related to lifestyle factors and the metabolic syndrome in 60-y-old men and women.
Design: Cross-sectional population based study.
Setting: Stockholm County, Sweden.
Subjects: Sixty-year-old men and women (n=4232).
Results: Moderate intake of wine (10–30 g/day) was associated with a lifestyle characterized by being married, having a university education, being employed, being Swedish-born, having a good quality of life according to economy, leisure time and health, compared with a group with low alcohol intake. The opposite characteristics were seen among the non-drinkers. Drinkers of spirits were more often smokers and also reported higher intake of sausage and fried potatoes compared with a group with low alcohol intake. In women, the metabolic syndrome was significantly more common in non-drinkers (20%), P<0.05, and less common among wine drinkers (8%), P<0.01, compared with a group with low alcohol intake. After adjustments, a significant lower odds ratio for the metabolic syndrome were seen in wine drinkers in women (OR=0.60, P<0.05).
Conclusion: Compared with low alcohol drinkers, moderate wine drinkers exhibited a more favorable pattern according to both lifestyle factors and metabolic parameters. The close link between alcohol drinking behaviour and lifestyle habits illustrate the complex relationship between alcohol and health.
Sponsorship: Swedish Heart-Lung Foundation, the Stockholm City County Council, the Swedish Society for Medicine, and the Swedish Medical Research Council.
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Rosell, M., de Faire, U. & Hellénius, ML. Low prevalence of the metabolic syndrome in wine drinkers—is it the alcohol beverage or the lifestyle?. Eur J Clin Nutr 57, 227–234 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ejcn.1601548
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ejcn.1601548
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