Beer
drinkers rejoice: Your favorite brew may be healthier than you think.
For
years, wine drinkers have indulged without guilt, reveling in the news that red
wine can help protect against heart disease. Recent research shows that beer
can also be good for what ails you, from
reducing risk for broken bones to helping warding off diabetes and mental
decline. It can even increase longevity, a large study suggests.
However,
the key to tapping into beer’s benefits is moderation, meaning just one
12-ounce beer per day for women and two for men. Heavy drinking ups the threat
of liver damage, some cancers, and heart problems. Bingeing on brewskis can
also make you fat, since a 12-ounce regular beer has about 150 calories, while
light beer has about 100.
Here
are 10 surprising—and healthy—reasons to cheer about your next beer.
1. Stronger Bones
Beer
contains high levels of silicon, which is linked to bone health. In a 2009 studyat Tufts
University and other centers, older men and women who swigged one or two drinks
daily had higher bone density, with the greatest benefits found in those who
favored beer or wine. However, downing more than two drinks was linked toincreased risk for fractures.
For
the best bone-building benefits, reach for pale ale, since a 2010 study of 100
types of beer from around the word identified these brews as richest in
silicon, while light lagers and non-alcoholic beers contained the least.
2. A Stronger Heart
A
2011 analysis of 16
earlier studies involving more than 200,000 people, conducted by researchers at
Italy’s Fondazion di Ricerca e Cura, found a 31 percent reduced risk of heart
disease in those who quaffed about a pint of beer daily, while risk surged in
those who guzzled higher amounts of alcohol, whether beer, wine, or spirits.
More
than 100 studies also show that moderate drinking trims risk of heart attacks
and dying from cardiovascular disease by 25 to 40 percent, Harvard reports. A beer or
two a day can help raise levels of HDL, the “good” cholesterol that helps keep
arteries from getting clogged.
3. Healthier Kidneys
A study in Finland singled out beer among
other alcoholic drinks, finding that each bottle of beer men drank daily
lowered their risk of developing kidney stones by 40 percent. One theory is
that beer’s high water content helped keep kidneys working, since dehydration
increases kidney stone risk.
It’s also possible that the hops in
beer help curb leeching of calcium from bones; that “lost” calcium also could
end up in the kidneys as stones.
4. Boosting Brain Health
A beer a day may help keep
Alzheimer’s disease and other dementia at bay, researchers say.
A 2005 study tracking
the health of 11,000 older women showed that moderate drinkers (those who
consumed about one drink a day) lowered their risk of mental decline by as much
as 20 percent, compared to non-drinkers. In addition, older women who downed a
drink a day scored as about 18 months “younger,” on average, on tests of mental
skills than the non-drinkers.
5. Reduced Cancer Risk
A Portuguese study found that
marinating steak in beer eliminates almost 70 percent of the carcinogens, called heterocyclic amines
(HCAs) produced when the meat is pan-fried. Researchers theorize that beer’s
sugars help block HCAs from forming.
Scientists also have found that beer
and wine contain about the same levels ofantioxidants, but the antioxidants are different because the
flavonoids found in hops and grapes are different.
6. Boosting Vitamin Levels
A Dutch study, performed at the TNO Nutrition and Food Research
Institute, found that beer-drinking participants had 30 percent higher levels
of vitamin B6 levels in their blood than their non-drinking counterparts, and
twice as much as wine drinkers. Beer also contains vitamin B12 and folic acid.
7. Guarding Against Stroke
Researchers at the Harvard School of
Public Health found that
moderate amounts of alcohol, including beer, help prevent blood clots that
block blood flow to the heart, neck and brain—the clots that cause ischemic
stroke, the most common type.
8. Reduced Risk for Diabetes
Drink up: A 2011 Harvard study of about 38,000 middle-aged men found
that when those who only drank occasionally raised their alcohol intake to one
to two beers or other drinks daily, their risk of developing type 2 diabetes
dropped by 25 percent. The researchers found no benefit to quaffing more than
two drinks. The researchers found that alcohol increases insulin sensitivity,
thus helping protect against diabetes.
9. Lower Blood Pressure
Wine is fine for your heart, but beer
may be even better: A Harvard study of 70,000 women ages 25 to 40 found
that moderate beer drinkers were less likely to develop high blood pressure—a
major risk factor for heart attack—than women who sipped wine or spirits.
10. Longer Life
In a 2005 review of 50 studies, the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) reported that moderate drinkers live longer. The USDA
also estimates that moderate drinking prevents about
26,000 deaths a year, due to lower rates of heart disease, stroke, and
diabetes.
These benefits appear to apply in
other countries as well, with an earlier study reporting
that, “if European beer drinkers stopped imbibing, there would be a decrease in
life expectancy of two years—and much unhappiness.”
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