Media     Wine Health     Wine Event     Links     Wine Basics     News     Guest Column     Restaurant    Wine Feature
Wine Health Archives
Diverse Wine Related...
Wine, Tea and Chocolate...
World's Healthiest Wine...
Wine Boosts Omega...
Study on Red Wine...
Metals in Wines Health...
Red Wine Helps...
Beauty and the...
Why Does Wine Give...
Wine & Heart Health...
Red Wine Chemical...
When Red Meat...
Live Longer and...
Now Drink White Wine..
Resveratrol Keeps Heart...
Health Warnings on the...
First Manual on Alcohol...
Excess Alcohol May...
Red Wine and Tea...
Wine and Pregnant Woman
Is Red Wine Good...
Middle Age Drinking...
UK Worried Over...
Confessions of a Wine...
Canadian Study warns...
Big may not be better...
Wine Reduces Leg...
Drink Wine Moderately...
Positive Results...
Wine Waste may...
1 2
Study on Red Wine Pill for Dieters

A research report published this week in the Cell Metabolism journal, says that the French scientists have identified an artificial drug that can  mimic the benefits of resveratrol without some of its side-effects.

The drug can trick the body into believing food is scarce, shifting it into `fat-burning mode' and helping ward off obesity and diabetes. However, the research is still at a very early stage and may not result in treatment for humans.

The discovery is part of the ongoing worldwide study of resveratrol, the red wine ingredient controversially linked to weight loss.

Researchers from Institute of Genetics and Molecular and Cellular Biology in France  tested a drug designed to target the same protein as resveratrol.

After 10 weeks of treatment, a low dose of this drug partially protected the mice from weight gain whereas a high dose completely prevented weight gain, improved blood sugar tolerance and endowed the animal with greater athletic ability. The effects applied even when the mice ate a high-fat diet.

There were no obvious side-effects. However, mice treated with the drug had less voluntary activity.

The study has not yet looked at medium to long-term safety of the drug in mice; it is yet far removed from trials on humans. It was also unclear if there were side-effects.

The experts also warn against seeking to lose weight by drinking red wine. The amount necessary to drink would be enough to kill the liver. In any case, wine has calories and is not recommended for weight loss.

One has to wait a while, a long while, to find out if the pills made from resveratrol will be practically useful as diet pills.

 

Email to Friend

 

 

 
Developed & Designed by Sadilak SoftNet
© All Rights Reserved 2002-2009