Red Wine: Exercise in a Bottle?

New research in the FASEB Journal suggests that a daily intake of resveratrol prevents the ill effects of simulated weightlessness on muscle and bone metabolism.

"healthy" ingredient in red wine, resveratrolAs strange as it sounds, a new research study published in the FASEB Journal (http://www.fasebj.org), suggests that the “healthy” ingredient in red wine, resveratrol, may prevent the negative effects that spaceflight and sedentary lifestyles have on people. The report describes experiments in rats that simulated the weightlessness of spaceflight, during which the group fed resveratrol did not develop insulin resistance or a loss of bone mineral density, as did those who were not fed resveratrol.

According to Gerald Weissmann, M.D., Editor-in-Chief of the FASEB Journal, “There are overwhelming data showing that the human body needs physical activity, but for some of us, getting that activity isn’t easy. A low gravity environment makes it nearly impossible for astronauts. For the earthbound, barriers to physical activity are equally challenging, whether they be disease, injury, or a desk job. Resveratrol may not be a substitute for exercise, but it could slow deterioration until someone can get moving again.”

Scientists studied rats that underwent simulated weightlessness by hindlimb tail suspension and were given a daily oral load of resveratrol. The control group showed a decrease in soleus muscle mass and strength, the development of insulin resistance, and a loss of bone mineral density and resistance to breakage. The group receiving resveratrol showed none of these complications. Study results further demonstrated some of the underlying mechanisms by which resveratrol acts to prevent the wasting adaptations to disuse-induced mechanical unloading. This study also suggests that resveratrol may be able to prevent the deleterious consequences of sedentary behaviors in humans.

“If resveratrol supplements are not your cup of tea,” Weissmann added, “then there’s good news. You can find it naturally in red wine, making it the toast of the Milky Way.”

###

Latest news….

  • Can soda tax curb obesity?
  • You Are What Your Mother Ate
  • National Nutrition Month Tips – Eat Right with Color
  • Epigenetics: How Vegetables Work in Cancer-Fighting Diet
  • Higher Vitamin D Intake Needed to Reduce Cancer Risk
  • Mushrooms are Unlikely Source of Vitamin D
  • Cruciferous vegetable intake is inversely associated with lung cancer risk among smokers
  • Tomato Consumption, Health and Cancer: Emerging Benefits
  • *

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    *

    Search Site

    Loading

    Editors’ Pick