PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Frequent moderate drinking of alcohol is associated with a lower risk of fatty liver disease

2011-05-24
(Press-News.org) In a large study of men in Japan, the presence of fatty liver disease by ultrasonography showed an inverse ( reduced risk) association with the frequency of moderate alcohol consumption; however, there was some suggestion of an increase in fatty liver disease with higher volume of alcohol consumed per day. Moderate drinkers had lower levels of obesity than did non-drinkers, and both obesity and metabolic abnormalities were positively associated with fatty liver disease.

These findings support the results of a number of other recent studies showing that moderate drinking does not increase the risk of this common type of liver disease; instead, it is associated with a lower risk of its occurrence. We agree with the implications of these studies as stated by the authors: "These results suggest that lifestyle modifications aimed at fighting central obesity and metabolic abnormalities should be the most important recommendations for the management of fatty liver. In addition, it seems unlikely that the risk of fatty liver can be reduced by the discontinuation and/or reduction of alcohol consumption alone."

### Reference: Hiramine Y, Imamura Y, Uto H, Koriyama C, Horiuchi M, Oketani M, Hosoyamada K, Kusano K, Ido A, Tsubouchi H. Alcohol drinking patterns and the risk of fatty liver in Japanese men. J Gastroenterol 2011 46:519�. DOI 10.1007/s00535-010-0336-z.

Comments on the present paper were provided by the following members of the International Scientific Forum on Alcohol Research:

Erik Skovenborg, MD, Scandinavian Medical Alcohol Board, Practitioner, Aarhus, Denmark.

R. Curtis Ellison, MD, Section of Preventive Medicine & Epidemiology, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, USA.

Arne Svilaas, MD, PhD, general practice and lipidology, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway.

Gordon Troup, MSc, DSc, School of Physics, Monash University, Victoria, Australia.

Harvey Finkel, MD, Hematology/Oncology, Boston University Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA.

Andrew L. Waterhouse, PhD, Marvin Sands Professor, University of California, Davis.

For the detailed critique of this paper by the International Scientific Forum on Alcohol Research, go to http://www.bu.edu/alcohol-forum/critique-043-frequent-moderate-drinking-of-alcohol-is-associated-with-a-lower-risk-of-fatty-liver-disease-23-may-2011/

The specialists who are members of the Forum are happy to respond to questions from Health Editors regarding emerging research on alcohol and health and will offer an independent opinion in context with other research on the subject.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

We have the technology for creating sustainable energy systems of the future

2011-05-24
We still need to halt the increase of global carbon emissions before 2020 and in the long term reduce emissions by at least 50% up to 2050. Ultimately, we will have to reduce carbon emissions to close to zero or even remove carbon completely from the atmosphere. However, climate change is not the only energy challenge: We need energy services to drive global economic development We need to provide equal access to modern energy worldwide We need to provide electricity to the 25% of the world's population still without electricity We need to provide modern energy ...

Lifestyle counseling and glycemic control in patients with diabetes: True to form?

2011-05-24
Boston, MA – Electronic medical records (EMRs) have been in use for more than 30 years, but have only increased in utilization in recent years, due in part to research supporting the benefits of EMRs and federal legislation. As EMRs have become a standard in medical care, there is a need for additional research of how the system and usage can be refined. A group of researchers from Brigham and Women's Hospital have done just that, and discovered that one way false information can make its way into EMRs is due to users' reliance on copying and pasting material within the ...

Expert discovers simple method of dealing with harmful radioactive iodine

2011-05-24
A novel way to immobilise radioactive forms of iodine using a microwave, has been discovered by an expert at the University of Sheffield. Iodine radioisotopes are produced by fission of uranium fuel in a nuclear reactor. Radioactive iodine is of concern because it is highly mobile in the environment and selective uptake by the thyroid gland can pose a significant cancer risk following long term exposure. Furthermore, iodine-129, which is a type of radioactive iodine, has an extremely long half life of 15.7 million years, so is one of the most significant long term hazards ...

MIT research: What makes an image memorable?

2011-05-24
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- Next time you go on vacation, you may want to think twice before shooting hundreds of photos of that scenic mountain or lake. A new study from MIT neuroscientists shows that the most memorable photos are those that contain people, followed by static indoor scenes and human-scale objects. Landscapes? They may be beautiful, but they are, in most cases, utterly forgettable. "Pleasantness and memorability are not the same," says MIT graduate student Phillip Isola, one of the lead authors of the paper, which will be presented at the IEEE Conference on ...

WSO2 Summer School Features Free Class on SOA Security Policy Enforcement for the Enterprise

WSO2 Summer School Features Free Class on SOA Security Policy Enforcement for the Enterprise
2011-05-24
The recent data breaches faced by Sony, Epsilon and TJX once again highlight the risks that lapses in governance pose to enterprise data security. To protect valuable company and customer data, enterprises need to implement IT security governance as a mechanism for managing authorization and access via pre-defined rules and policies. Industry-standard technologies, such as the eXtensible Access Control Markup Language (XAMCL), are helping to facilitate this governance by enabling more efficient and nuanced security policy enforcement. IT architects and developers can ...

2 Greenland glaciers lose enough ice to fill Lake Erie

2011-05-24
COLUMBUS, Ohio – A new study aimed at refining the way scientists measure ice loss in Greenland is providing a "high-definition picture" of climate-caused changes on the island. And the picture isn't pretty. In the last decade, two of the largest three glaciers draining that frozen landscape have lost enough ice that, if melted, could have filled Lake Erie. The three glaciers – Helheim, Kangerdlugssuaq and Jakobshavn Isbrae – are responsible for as much as one-fifth of the ice flowing out from Greenland into the ocean. "Jakobshavn alone drains somewhere between ...

Nearby supernova factory ramps up

Nearby supernova factory ramps up
2011-05-24
A local supernova factory has recently started production, according to a wealth of new data from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory on the Carina Nebula. This discovery may help astronomers better understand how some of the Galaxy's heaviest and youngest stars race through their lives and release newly-forged elements into their surroundings. Located in the Sagittarius-Carina arm of the Milky Way a mere 7,500 light years from Earth, the Carina Nebula has long been a favorite target for astronomers using telescopes tuned to a wide range of wavelengths. Chandra's extraordinarily ...

U-M study: Kids dependent on long-term ventilation require longer, more expensive hospital care

2011-05-24
ANN ARBOR, Mich. - Despite significant technological improvements, children reliant on long-term mechanical ventilation often require extensive additional care, including costly hospital stays and emergency visits. A new study led by University of Michigan researchers found that children with complex chronic conditions who require long-term mechanical ventilation have significantly higher mortality, longer length of hospitalizations, higher mean charges, and more emergency department admissions. The results of this study, led by Brian D. Benneyworth, M.D., M.S., Pediatric ...

AV RingtoneMAX: Brand-New Free Ringtone Maker from Audio4fun.com

AV RingtoneMAX: Brand-New Free Ringtone Maker from Audio4fun.com
2011-05-24
Today announced the launch of the new freeware AV RingtoneMAX, a free software program which helps users quickly create a new ringtone. Whatever it is: a song, a piece of music, a speech in a movie, or a fun clip, a funny sound, or even a human voice or any audio file, all can be used to create a new and unique ringtone. Download the program at http://mp3-player.audio4fun.com/ringtone-maker-download.htm. With AV RingtoneMAX, it only takes 3 steps to make a new ringtone. First the user selects any audio clip, or specifies the track that they want to use to make the ringtone; ...

Medicare improved Canadian doctors' salaries: Queen's University study

2011-05-24
U.S. doctors might find that their incomes start to rise – not decline – when Barack Obama's healthcare reforms are put in place says a Queen's University School of Medicine professor. "The medical-income argument in the United States against moving toward a Canadian-style system is feeble," says Jacalyn Duffin, a medical doctor who specializes in the history of medicine. "Physicians' incomes grew more quickly than those of other Canadian professions following Medicare. The universal, single-payer system has been good not only for Canadians but also for Canada's doctors." Dr. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Otago experts propose fiber as first new essential nutrient in 50 years

Auburn Physics PhD student earns prestigious DOE Fellowship

AI tool helps you learn how autistic communication works

To show LGBTQ+ support, look beyond Pride Month

Using artificial intelligence to understand how emotions are formed

Exposure to wildfire smoke late in pregnancy may raise autism risk in children

Breaking barriers in lymphatic imaging: Rice’s SynthX Center leads up to $18 million effort for ‘unprecedented resolution and safety’

Dhaval Jadav joins the SETI Institute Board to help spearhead novel science and technology approaches in the search for extraterrestrial life

Political writing retains an important and complex role in the national conversation, new book shows

Weill Cornell Medicine receives funding to develop diagnostic toolbox for lymphatic disease

It started with a cat: How 100 years of quantum weirdness powers today’s tech

McGill researchers identify a range of unexpected chemical contaminants in human milk

Physical therapy research highlights arthritis’ toll on the workforce — and the path forward

Biomedical and life science articles by female researchers spend longer under review

Forgetting in infants can be prevented in mice by blocking their brain’s immune cells

Blocking immune cells in the brain can prevent infant forgetting

AI-driven ultrafast spectrometer-on-a-chip: A revolution in real-time sensing

World enters “era of global water bankruptcy”; UN scientists formally define new post-crisis reality for billions

Innovations in spatial imaging could unlock higher wheat yields

A twitch in time? Quantum collapse models hint at tiny time fluctuations

Community water fluoridation not linked to lower birth weight, large US study finds

Stanford University’s Guosong Hong announced as inaugural recipient of the SPIE Biophotonics Discovery’s Impact of the Year Award

Ice, ice, maybe: There’s always a thin layer of water on ice — or is there?

Machine learning lends a helping ‘hand’ to prosthetics

Noninvasive brain scanning could send signals to paralyzed limbs

Community water fluoridation and birth outcomes

SGLT2 inhibitors vs GLP-1 receptor agonists for kidney outcomes in individuals with type 2 diabetes

Long-term exposure to air pollution and risk and prognosis of motor neuron disease

Five-year absolute risk–based and age-based breast cancer screening in the US

Study finds elevated alcohol involvement in suicides of lesbian, gay and bisexual women

[Press-News.org] Frequent moderate drinking of alcohol is associated with a lower risk of fatty liver disease