
Alcohol has been called both a tonic and a poison
This is SCIENCE IN THE NEWS in VOA Special English. I’m Barbara Klein.
And I’m Bob Doughty.
Drinking alcohol is socially acceptable behavior in many parts of the  world. Some medical experts say light drinking may be good for your  health, especially for the heart. But they say these health benefits  should be compared to the many health risks linked to alcohol use.
Today we report on some of the issues involving alcohol. And we tell  about findings that may help people who have grown dependent on  alcohol. 
Millions of people around the world have a glass of wine with dinner,  drink a beer at a sporting event, or accept alcoholic drinks at a party.
The use of alcohol dates back more than ten thousand years. From then  until now, alcohol has played an important part in human civilization.  It is used in cultural and religious ceremonies, at social gatherings,  and even for medical purposes.
Records of alcohol’s effects date back to ancient times. Alcohol has  been called both a tonic and a poison. And medical experts continue to  debate its value.
Alcohol is created through a process called fermentation. During this  process, yeast is used to turn sugar into a simple molecule – ethanol,  also called ethyl alcohol. Different kinds of sugar are used to make  different alcoholic drinks. For example, the sugar from grapes is used  to make wine. Sugar from grain is used to produce vodka and gin. And  sugar from sugarcane or molasses can produce rum.
Alcohol affects every organ in the body. When alcohol enters the body,  some of it goes immediately to the stomach and the bloodstream. The rest  of it, about eighty percent, goes to the small intestine and is  released into the bloodstream. Once alcohol enters the blood, it is  pumped throughout the body by the heart.
The liver is responsible for detoxifying the alcohol and removing it  from the blood. But, the liver can only process a small amount of  alcohol at a time. The rest continues to move throughout the body. It  mixes with the water in bodily tissue. It also enters the central  nervous system and the brain. Ethanol acts as a drug, affecting  emotions, coordination and thinking ability.
There has been a large amount of research done on alcohol and its  effects on human health. Much of the research has examined the harmful  effects. But, some research suggests that having one to two drinks of  alcohol a day may offer some health benefits.
Several large studies have shown that this type of moderate drinking  may lower the risk of coronary heart disease, cardiovascular disease,  ischemic stroke and diabetes. Moderate drinking has also been linked to a  reduced risk of death from heart attack and a decreased risk of  Alzheimer’s and other dementias.
A study earlier this year suggested that drinking small amounts of red wine may help lower the risk of breast cancer in women.
Researchers at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in California studied thirty  six women. Each woman drank a glass of red or white wine every day for  almost a month. Researchers collected blood samples from the women two  times a month to measure their hormone levels.
The next month the women who drank red wine were told to drink white  wine instead. The white wine drinkers were told to drink red wine. The  researchers found that the women who drank red wine had lower levels of  the female hormone estrogen than the white wine drinkers. Estrogen  levels are known to increase the growth of cancer cells in the body.
Glenn Braunstein helped to prepare a report on the study. He said red  grapes have chemicals that are not found in white grapes. He said the  study suggests that these chemicals may help to lower the risk of breast  cancer.
The report was published in the Journal of Women’s Health. Both Dr.  Braunstein and study organizer Chrisandra Shufelt called for larger  studies to measure the safety and effectiveness of red wine in reducing  breast cancer risk. They said other recent studies suggested that even  small amounts of alcohol may generally increase the risk of breast  cancer in women.
Researchers at Harvard University carried out one such study. It found  that women who drink four small glasses of wine a week increase their  risk of breast cancer by fifteen percent.
Many other studies have examined the harmful effects of alcohol use on  the body. Medical experts say the deciding issues are how much alcohol  you drink, and how you drink it. For example, experts say having three  drinks in one day is not the same as having one drink a day for three  days.
Alicia Ann Kowalchuk is medical director of an alcohol and drug  intervention program called InSight, at the Harris County Hospital  District of Houston, Texas. She is also an assistant professor at the  Baylor College of Medicine.
“We think of substance use issues along a continuum now, going all the  way from abstinence, to healthy use, to misuse, to abuse and to  dependency. Healthy use for adults -- that’s men under age sixty-five --  is no more than four drinks in a day and no more than fourteen drinks  in a week. And for women of all ages, it’s no more than seven drinks in a  week and no more than three drinks on a day.”
Dr. Kowalchuk says that to get the health benefits linked to alcohol, men and women should limit their drinking even more.
“Pretty much all the literature that I’ve seen really shows that when  you go above about one drink on average per day for women and two drinks  on average per day for men younger than sixty-five, you start negating  all of those positive health benefits.”
She also says staying within those limits is considered safe or non-hazardous drinking.
“For misuse you’re drinking above those limits, but you haven’t had a  lot of consequences from your drinking. Once you get to abuse you start  having consequences and despite the consequences you keep using. So  that’s the hallmark of abuse, to continue using for at least a year  despite having maybe a DUI (drinking under the influence), a health  consequence, a work consequence or a family consequence.”
And, she says, alcohol dependency is further marked by a complete loss of control over alcohol use.
Kim Dennis is medical director of the Timberline Knolls Residential  Treatment Center in Illinois. She notes another consideration when  talking about alcohol limits.
“When we talk about an alcoholic beverage, we need to be very clear  about what we’re talking about because many of my patients at Timberline  Knolls would consider a thirty-two ounce glass of beer one alcoholic  beverage. And when we talk about having one alcoholic beverage, we’re  referring specifically to twelve ounces of beer, five ounces of wine or  one and a half ounces of hard liquor.” 
Dr. Dennis says whether drinking alcohol is a good choice for you will depend on several things.
“If a person has risk factors for developing alcoholism -- family  members with alcoholism, difficult early life experiences, other  addictive disorders - - the risk to benefit ratio of drinking alcohol  for that person would be very, very high.”
Excessive alcohol use has been linked to chronic conditions like  cirrhosis of the liver, pancreas disease and cardiovascular disease. It  has also been linked to many forms of cancer, including cancer of the  mouth, throat, larynx, esophagus, breast, colon and rectum.
The World Health Organization says the harmful use of alcohol results  in two million five hundred thousand deaths each year. This number  includes more than three hundred thousand people between the ages of  fifteen and twenty-nine. The WHO says alcohol use is the world’s third  leading cause of disease, after childhood malnourishment and unsafe sex.
One recent study involving alcohol could lead to more effective methods for treating alcohol abuse.
Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, believe  they may have found why so many people are dependent on alcohol.  Researchers at the university’s Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center  were able to prove scientifically what many have long believed: drinking  alcohol increases the release of endorphins in the brain.
Endorphins are small chemical proteins. They produce feelings of  pleasure and reward. The researchers say this may explain why alcohol  can become so addictive. The researchers used imaging technology to  study the immediate effects of alcohol in the brains of twenty-five  people.
The researchers say the study suggests that the brains of heavy  drinkers change in a way to make alcohol more pleasing. They say this  could explain how problem drinking becomes a problem in the first place.  And, they say discovering the exact areas of the brain where endorphins  are released could lead to the development of more effective drugs to  help treat alcohol addiction.