Text Size
   
ImageNutrient Database

A searchable database
of food nutrient content.

AvocadoHealth Benefits of Avocados

The health benefits of avocados include cholesterol lowering, skin health, macular degeneration prevention and high blood pressure prevention.

Hibiscus TeaHibiscus Tea for Reducing High Blood Pressure

Studies have shown that consuming hibiscus tea infusion has positive effects on blood pressure.

Hepatitis CHepatitis C Explained

Hepatitis C is an infectious disease
of the liver caused by the hepatitis C virus
also known as HCV.

How to get FatHow to Get Fat Without Trying

A bold look at the marketing of unhealthy food to children: should children be protected from junk food marketing?

Alzheimer's DiseaseWhat is Alzheimer's Disease?

Alzheimer’s disease is an irreversible, progressive brain disease that slowly destroys memory and thinking skills.

RSS IconSubscribe via RSS Feed or Email

Get daily updates and notifications of the latest health news delevired to your RSS reader or your inbox.

Facebook IconSubscribe via Facebook

Join our Facebook page and get daily updates posted on your wall. Comments and discussions are welcome.

Twitter IconSubscribe via Twitter

Follow us on Twitter to receive updates.

Binge Drinking Weakens the Body's Ability to Fight off Infection

Cytokine
Research has shown how binge drinking weakens the body's ability to fight off infection for at least 24 hours afterwards. The study focused on the effect of heavy drinking on toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), a protein that has an important role in immune system activation.

Previous mouse experiments indicate that binge drinking, consuming large quantities of alcohol over a short time to deliberately get drunk, inhibits the body's production of pro-inflammatory cytokines. These are signaling molecules that launch the inflammatory response to infection.

Image: Cytokine

Researchers set out to compare the in vivo and in vitro effects of alcohol on cytokines and TLR4, using a mouse model. Their results confirm that acute alcohol exposure prevents the body from producing certain key pro-inflammatory cytokines. Ethanol molecules suppress TLR4's usual ability to send signals that would normally trigger the production of inflammatory cytokines, the authors suggest.

The in vivo and in vitro results were similar, although using the mouse model the study authors were able to pick up more detail on alcohol's inhibitory effect on NF-κB, a protein complex that controls DNA transcription and which is known to control expression of some of the cytokines that are inhibited by alcohol.

Alcohol's effects continue long after the party is over: some cytokines were still not on full duty guarding against infection 24 hours after the binge. "The time frame during which the risk of infection is increased might be at least 24 hours," said study author Stephen Pruett. "A persistent effect of ethanol on cells is indicated, such that inhibition of the response of some cytokines occurs even after the ethanol is cleared."
References:
1. Stephen B Pruett and Ruping Fan. Ethanol inhibits LPS-induced signaling and modulates cytokine production in peritoneal macrophages in vivo in a model for binge drinking. Stephen B Pruett, Ruping Fan BMC Immunology 2009, 10:49 (18 September 2009)

Related Articles


woman-drinking.jpg
In a study appearing in Alcoholism journal, researchers report that genetic predisposition to impulsivity is a trait predictive of alcoholism. Alcoholism is a disease and other research
liver-2.jpg
According to UK researchers, long-term daily drinking, rather than weekly binge drinking, is by far the biggest risk factor in serious liver disease. The study concludes that increases in
smoking-kills.jpg
Researchers at University College London and St George's, University of London measured recent exposure to tobacco smoke in non-smoking middle-aged men taking part in the British Regional
drunk-superhero.jpg
The more alcohol an individual drinks, the smaller his or her total brain volume, according to a report in the October issue of Archives of Neurology, one of the JAMA/Archives
cigarette-ad.jpg
As Americans prepared for a day of smoking cessation as part of the American Cancer Society Great American Smokeout in 2008, new research gives them more reasons to consider permanent smoking