Resveratrol
— the red wine compound often touted for its possible healthful and
anti-aging effects — may not bring the benefits to healthy people that
preliminary research has suggested, a small new study finds.
In
the 12-week study, 29 healthy women, most of them in their late 50s,
were given either resveratrol supplements or a placebo. No appreciable
differences were found after the 12 weeks between the two groups in
regard to body fat, resting metabolic rate, fat levels in the blood, or
markers of inflammation.
"Our data demonstrate that resveratrol supplementation does
not have metabolic benefits in relatively healthy middle-aged women,"
study researcher Dr. Samuel Klein, director of the Center for Human
Nutrition at Washington University in St. Louis, said in a statement.
People
with metabolic problems did not take part in the study, and it is still
possible resveratrol might benefit them, Klein noted.
Although
annual sales of resveratrol supplements in the U.S. have risen to $30
million, "few studies have evaluated the effects of resveratrol in
people," Klein said. The supplements' popularity may be due to studies
on animals and cells growing in lab dishes, which have suggested
resveratrol improves metabolism or could prevent or reverse chronic
health problems such as diabetes and heart disease, he said.
Fifteen
of the post-menopausal women in the study took 75-milligram supplements
of resveratrol daily — equivalent to the amount they'd get from
drinking eight liters of red wine. The other 14 took a placebo pill.
It's
not surprising that the study did not find any effect from a mere
75-milligram daily dose, said Dr. Jay Chung, chief of the Laboratory of
Obesity and Aging Research at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood
Institute, who was not involved in the new study.
Studies
showing beneficial metabolic effects of resveratrol have used higher
doses, of 150 mg to 2,000 mg day, Chung told My Health News Daily. Read more
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