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       Greece vs. Germany    

Wine drinking in Greece and in Germany

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International Conference
Traditional Mediterranean Diet: Past, Present and Future
Athens, 21 - 23 April 2004

Role of wine in the (Mediterranean) diet - Greece vs. Germany

Traditionally, wine has been an integral part of meals, and cross-cultural studies have reported a significantly lower risk (20-60%) of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in Mediterranean regions where wine is a daily staple of the diet and lifestyle.
 
The complex relationship between light-to-moderate alcohol consumption (20-30g of alcohol daily) and CVD mortality is reflected in an U-shaped curve. Total mortality rates are generally slightly lower among moderate drinkers than among abstainers. Scientific studies are increasingly demonstrating that wine has numerous other positive effects: Moderate wine drinkers are less likely to develop diabetes and diabetics who consume wine moderately have a lower risk of CVD. Moderate drinking may also contribute to better accumulated bone mineral density and thus, reduces the risk of osteoporosis. The rates of Alzheimer's Disease and dementia are lower among moderate wine drinkers than abstainers. The mechanisms by which moderate wine consumption decreases CVD include the increase of HDL-cholesterol levels, modification of haemostatic factors, coagulation and fibrynolysis and decrease of platelet aggregation. Findings that wine drinkers are at a decreased risk of mortality from CVD compared to non-wine drinkers, suggest that substances present in wine are responsible for a beneficial effect on the outcome, in addition to that from ethanol.
 
Wine contains many different types of polyphenolic antioxidants which support the action of alcohol by inhibiting LDL-oxidation. Although there is a biological effect of alcohol, differences in lifestyle can also partly account for the relation between wine/alcohol consumption and CVD. Moderate drinkers tend to smoke less than other groups and hypertension is inversely related to alcohol consumption. In addition, wine-drinking populations tend to have a healthier diet and different drinking patterns than those who consume other alcoholic beverages.
 
Does the type of wine make a difference? More polyphenolic substances are found in red wine and the reported health benefits have been mainly associated with red wine. In Greece and Germany, white wine is the wine that is consumed the most. Some studies demonstrated that the total quantity of antioxidants is not the critical factor but the quality and type of polyphenolic compounds.
 
Is the wine or the wine drinker responsible for the positive health effects? Wine comsumption has been decreasing in Southern Europe whereas it has been increasing in Northern Europe. In the 1960s, consumption of wine was more than 3 times higher in Greece (41.9 l/person/yr) than in Germany (12.3 l); now, Germans (23.9 l/p/yr) are catching up in terms of wine consumption with the Greek people (34 l/p/yr). Other significant differences from the original traditional Mediterranean diet are found in most Mediterranean countries, showing a Westernization of dietary habits. Will this change affect the CVD risk profile? The risk factors, drinking patterns and lifestyle of a Mediterranean country like Greece will be compared with a Northern European country like Germany.

 


U.G. Fradera, C. Stein-Hammer, Deutsche Weinakademie, Germany
Y. Kotseridis, Agricultural University of Athens - KEOSOE, Greece

Main Menu

Session 1: Mediterranean diet - A gift of gods
Session 2: From Mediterranean diet to Mediterranean lifestyle.
Session 3: Can the Mediterranean diet be industrialized?
Session 4: The Medi-Rivage intervention study, results after three months' follow up.
Session 5: Santorini grapes against atherosclerosis and coronary heart disease.
- Role of wine in the (Mediterranean) diet - Greece vs. Germany.
- Antioxidant activity and phenolic content of Argentine wines from different varieties and vintages.
- The bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) and the variant Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease (VCJD) cases in the Mediterranean countries. Factors that influence meat safety during the contemporary cattle slaughtering process.
- Fruit and vegetable consumption is inversely associated with blood pressure in a Mediterranean population with a high-fat intake: The Sun Study.
- Serum HDL2 and HDL3 amounts and compositions are impaired in hypercholesterolemic rat fed highly on purified sardine protein despite unchanged lecithin: cholesterol acyltransferase activity.
Session 6: Bioavailability study of olive tree bioactive substances in biological fluids by mass spectrometric techniques aiming at the evaluation of their role on human health.
Session 7: The present role of the Mediterranean diet.
Session 8: Postprandial lipemia, dietary fat and Mediterranean diet.
Session 9: Contribution of table olives to the Mediterranean diet.
Session 10: Dietary Mediterranean diet in West Algerian healthy population.
Poster presentations: Development of a short dietary intake questionnaire for the quantitative estimation of adherence to the cardioprotective Mediterranean diet.

 
 
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