A glass of red wine is worth an hour of exercise. Red wine compound resveratrol may negate health benefits of exercise. Or both. Or neither.
Once again
we have dueling headlines about the effects of red wine and resveratrol: Does
it enhance the effects of exercise or negate them? A study from the University
of Alberta in Canada found that resveratrol supplementation in animals improved
muscle and heart functions in the same way as an hour of exercise would,
leading the study’s lead author Jason Dyck to postulate that “We could
conceivably create an improved exercise performance in a pill." Supplement
marketers already label resveratrol as an “exercise mimic,” while bloggers and
wine lovers conclude that a glass of red wine would therefore do the same.
Meanwhile,
at Queen’s University a few provinces over in Ontario, researchers were finding
that resveratrol supplementation blunted the benefits of high-intensity interval
exercise, a seemingly opposite effect. In a four-week placebo-controlled clinical trial, the data “clearly demonstrates that
RSV supplementation doesn't augment training, but may impair the affect it has
on the body" according to the authors.
The
implications from these studies are not so opposite as they may seem, however.
For one thing, the study that found resveratrol enhanced exercise results was
in animals, not a human clinical trial, and animal studies frequently do not
produce the same results as clinical trials. Another key difference is that the
clinical study was measuring whether resveratrol could enhance the effects of intensive exercise, while the animal study
was looking at whether it could replace
exercise. And all studies on resveratrol are potentially confounded by the fact
that it may have completely different and even opposing effects at different
doses, a phenomenon known as hormesis. For
all of these reasons we are still a ways off from knowing the answer to the
question of resveratrol as an exercise mimic.
One thing we
can say (again) is that a glass of red wine is not the same as a resveratrol
pill. The doses are different, and wine has a multitude of compounds that may
interact synergistically with the small amount of resveratrol in wine. Wine
drinkers are healthier in part because they tend to have healthier lifestyles
including regular exercise.
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