Alcohol and cardiovascular disease : The Russian paradox
Présenté par David Leon, London School of Hygiene & Tropical (LSHTM) - Discutant : Michel Guillot (Upenn)
For many years the relatively low mortality from coronary heart
disease in France was referred to by epidemiologists and public
health experts as the "French paradox", as the population was
regarded as having a diet high in saturated fats. One "answer" to
this apparent contradiction has been that the historically high
level of alcohol consumption in France has exerted a
counter-balancing cardioprotective effect. However, the same does
not appear to be the case in Russia. One of the key distinguishing
features of the Russian health crisis over the past 30 years has
been the extraordinary fluctuations in cardiovascular disease
mortality. These have followed almost exactly the fluctuations in
acute alcohol poisoning. In this seminar I will explore the
potential role of alcohol as an explanation of the very high rates
of cardiovascular mortality in Russia, and how recent studies we
have done throw more light on the underlying biological mechanisms
that link alcohol to this major class of non-communicable
disease