Glass of wine a day may help you age slower, research finds

33.33% credibility
 
Related

Brazil's Ex-Leader, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Is Held for Questioning

Atma
832 points

A mom wrote a heartwarming letter to Hillary Clinton about her dreams for her daughter s future

Atma
794 points



Most recent

Pure Storage nombra a Joao Silva como vicepresidente para Europa, Medio Oriente, África y América La

Patricia Amaya Comunicaciones
8 points

¿Quién mató a Gaitán?

César Castaño
22 points

Experiencia sensorial total en Ethernal Fest: música, gastronomía y tecnología

Comunicaciones
20 points

Operaciones inteligentes con flotas conectadas en el transporte de cadena de frío

Tecnologia
22 points

Tecnología y personas: la verdadera revolución en la experiencia de cliente

Tecnologia
20 points

Los vientos de guerra en Europa siguen soplando

NOTICIAS-ETF
14 points

¿Cuándo empezamos a vivir? (Yo mismo)

El diario de Enrique
14 points

Miguel Sabido recibre premio de la Agrupación de Periodistas Teatrales.

Benjamin Bernal
12 points

¿Qué piensa Colombia sobre el liderazgo femenino? Análisis de Ipsos revela las percepciones

Prensa
14 points

Hoy: Carlos Perrotti

NOTICIAS-ETF
12 points
SHARE
TWEET
Tough day at work? Have a couple of drinks – you may age better as a result.

Glass of wine a day may help you age slower, research finds

People who drank one or two alcoholic beverages daily aged better than those who drank less, or were teetotal, research from the University of Iowa claims to have found.

The project, which examined the genetic make-up of 656 “European Americans” and 180 “African Americans”, also found all levels of smoking were “associated with accelerated biological aging”.

“In contrast, a mixed effect was observed for alcohol consumption. Moderate use of alcohol was associated with healthy aging,” the report noted.

Very low and excessive consumption were found to be “linked to accelerated aging”.

The study examined the possibilities of monitoring changes in the human genome as an indicator of aging, specifically in relation to lifestyle.

Researchers, led by Robert A. Philibet and assisted by Meeshanthini Dogan, hope by understanding the impact of tobacco and alcohol on a person’s genomes they will be able to assess “how best to use the limited public health resources we have”.

Fuente: www.independent.co.uk
SHARE
TWEET
To comment you must log in with your account or sign up!
Featured content