Skip to content.

Metabolic Syndrome Institute

You are here: Home » News » Regular alcohol consumption shown to improve insulin resistance in healthy Japanese men


Regular alcohol consumption shown to improve insulin resistance in healthy Japanese men

Document Actions
  • Print this page
2007-june-21

The relationship between alcohol consumption and insulin sensitivity is controversial, since ensuing obesity and other dietary/lifestyle factors may act as confounders in certain individuals. The goal of this study was to examine whether regular alcohol consumption improves insulin sensitivity in healthy Japanese men and to which extent obesity affects this relationship. A total of 1029 men having undergone medical checkups were divided into non-obese (BMI<25kg/m2) and obese (BMI≥25 kg/m2) subjects and further subdivided into non-regular drinkers, moderate drinkers (1-6 days/week) and daily drinkers (7 days/week). Insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) and other cardiac risk factors were compared between groups. Although HOMA-IR was about 2 times greater in obese compared to non-obese men in all categories (P<0.001), alcohol consumption decreased HOMA-IR in a dose-dependent manner in both non-obese and obese men. After adjusting for age, BMI, systolic blood pressure, smoking status, LDL-cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol, and liver dysfunction, regular alcohol consumption was an independent negative factor for HOMA-IR (OR=0.576, P=0.003).

Abstract

Keywords:
Blood pressure – BMI – Cardiovascular risk – HDL-cholesterol – HOMA – Insulin resistance – LDL-cholesterol – Obesity - Smoking

Ongoing Trials
Metabolic Syndrome Institute Landmark Studies
Guidelines
Metabolic Syndrome Institute Guidelines
Cardiovascular risks calculators
Metabolic Syndrome Institute Cardiovascular risks calculators
How to measure your waistline ?
Metabolic Syndrome Institute Measure your waistline
MSI Meeting
Newsletter

What's new ?
MSI special session at WCC 2008
Web Conference
Metabolic Syndrome Institute Web Conferences
 

This site conforms to the following standards: