Can We Get Too Old for Wine?
While
         enormous attention understandably has been directed to the
         effects of maternal drinking upon the earliest stages of
         life, not much has been written about beneficial or adverse
         consequences to those of us several years beyond the age of
         39.
         
CAN
         WE GET TOO OLD for WINE?
I
         shall not dare strictly
         to define “elderly”, likely viewed by most as 15 years older
         than they. In general, medical studies of elderly
         populations concern themselves with people over 65, perhaps
         over 70.
Many well-meaning
         commentators intuitively advise older folks not to drink, or
         to limit themselves to droplet quantities. Is this blanket
         caution backed up by data?
First, I would belabor the
         obvious – some individuals, at any given age, are far more
         frail and vulnerable than others – true at all ages, more so
         among the elderly. Many older people can rewardingly and
         safely equal or even outperform those younger. Most often,
         sensible pacing enables most of us to continue our
         activities as we age. It is clear that as we age we do enjoy
         narrower margins of error, so some restraint is prudent, and
         that we should not drink more just because we get older. We
         must remain aware of possible interactions with medicines.
         My reportage herein must not be used as individual medical
         advice.
We’ll review the results of
         research specifically directed at the elderly. Be aware
         that, for most of the organ-systems of the body, there is
         little or no difference in wine’s effects based on age, at
         least not qualitatively, among non-pregnant
         adults.
The most feared and
         destructive of disorders of the elderly are those that
         impair brain function. Alcohol abuse, but not moderate use,
         often damages the nervous system, variously and severely.
         Let’s look at what recent data tell us.
Letenneur, Dartigues and
         Orgogozo, of the University of Bordeaux, found no
         deleterious effects of wine on the intellect of 3766 elderly
         individuals, even in more than moderate quantity. Moderate
         wine consumption appeared at first glance to be associated
         with reduced risk of cognitive deficit compared to
         abstention, but the favorable difference did not stand up to
         strict statistical rigors. The authors concluded: “Wine
         consumption remains one of the last pleasures of this stage
         of life; our findings argue against prohibiting mild or
         moderate wine consumption in the elderly.”
Investigators at the
         schools of medicine of Indiana University and Duke
         University studied the mental effects of long-term alcohol
         use on aging twins, thus minimizing confounding influences
         of genetic and other factors. Neither abstainers nor
         alcoholics were included. Cognitive function of five groups,
         stratified by usual consumption, was compared. The
         intellectual scores of cotwins averaging one to two drinks
         per day are higher than those of their counterparts who
         drank either more or less. We appear to have still another
         J-shaped curve.
A study of the elderly
         population of East Boston revealed that neither
         mild-to-moderate consumption of alcohol nor smoking
         increases the risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease. While
         smoking is associated with weakness, poor balance and
         neuromuscular performance of older women, moderate drinkers
         in the study group of 9704 women over 65 have better
         neuromuscular function than nondrinkers. The Cardiovascular
         Health Study’s recently published findings are impressive.
         Residents of North Carolina, California, Maryland, and
         Pennsylvania – 65 years of age and older – were carefully
         followed (including examinations of mental state and
         cognition and brain MRIs) over several years. Abstainers
         have twice the risk of dementia of those who consume between
         one and six drinks per week. (In one particularly sensitive
         genetic group, consumption of seven or more drinks per week
         raised the dementia risk.) One mechanism of preservation of
         brain function may be the familiar protection of blood
         vessels supplying the brain by light-to-moderate drinking.
         Indeed, the brain-feeding carotid arteries of the moderate
         drinkers are less arteriosclerotic than those of
         abstainers.
We have long observed that
         modest doses of alcohol in older individuals help to
         stimulate appetite, regularize bowel function, improve mood
         and socialization, and reduce the requirement for drugs –
         though effects on sleep may be mixed.
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         We must be impressed by a very large project, in which 6871
         elderly individuals in Massachusetts, Iowa and Connecticut
         were studied by investigators from the medical centers of
         Harvard and Yale universities, the universities of
         Massachusetts, Washington, Iowa, and Hawaii, and the
         National Institutes of Health. Like so many other studies,
         this one indicates that low or moderate alcohol consumption
         is associated with reduced deaths resulting from
         cardiovascular disease. No evidence of increased cancer risk
         was found associated with alcohol consumption.
We tend to accumulate
         inflammatory disorders as we age. (Arthritis is the most
         familiar of these.) We are coming to understand that
         inflammation plays an important role in coronary disease,
         and probably in atherosclerotic disease of other blood
         vessels. Increased levels of markers of inflammation in the
         blood, such as C-reactive protein and interleukin-6, are
         predictive of disease and death due to cardiovascular
         disease in middle-aged and older people. A just-published
         study of men and women in their 70s in Memphis and
         Pittsburgh confirmed that, compared to abstention, light
         drinking has an anti-inflammatory effect, reducing blood
         levels of the markers, and, perhaps reducing cardiac
         risk.
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                   FOOD and WINE My wife, a  |