Haemostatic cardiovascular risk factors: Differential effects of red wine and diet on healthy young population

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Abstract

Two groups (21 healthy young male each) received either Mediterranean-type diet (MD) or high-fat diet (HFD) during 90 days. Between days 30-60, both diets were supplemented with 240 ml/day of red wine. MD alone was associated with: lower plasma fibrinogen (p =0.03), factor VIIc (p=0.034) and factor VIIIc (p=0.0057); higher levels of protein S (p=0.013); longer BT (p=0.017); and marginal increases in platelet serotonin aggregation and secretion after stimulation with epinephrine. Red wine supplementation in both diets, resulted in lower plasma fibrinogen (p=0.001) and factor VIIc (p=0.05), and in increased t-PA (p=0.01) and PAI-1 (p=0.0003). The effects of wine on antithrombin III (p=0.01) were divergent, with a decrease in the HFD group and an increase in the MD group. No effects of diet or wine were detected in plasma proteins C and S, BT or VWF:Ag. Wine supplementation also resulted in a significant increase in ex vivo platelet aggregation and secretion after stimulation with collagen (1 and 2 g/ml, p

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Mezzano, D., & Leighton, F. (2003). Haemostatic cardiovascular risk factors: Differential effects of red wine and diet on healthy young population. In Pathophysiology of Haemostasis and Thrombosis (Vol. 33, pp. 472–478). https://doi.org/10.1159/000083848

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