Resveratrol, Red Wine Grapes and Hard Science
Decades ago, scientists discovered the French Paradox, and determined that despite a high fat diet, the French lived longer and healthier, and have concluded that the reason is their daily dose of red wine.
Most recently, discoveries by Dr. Joseph Baur and Dr. David Sinclair at Harvard Medical School in 2006 have shown that there are natural plant extracts that can activate survival genes and mimic the longevity effects of calorie restriction, without having to dramatically restrict calorie intake.
After investigating over 20,000 compounds, 19 of these compounds were identified, and 17, all polyphenols with strong antioxidant properties, are found in red wine grapes, including Resveratrol and Quercetin. Further, these polyphenols work together, and enable one another to stay longer in the blood stream – termed bioavailability.
Studies on fish, mice, and worms and flies have shown that lifespan, and healthy lifespan, can be prolonged by 60%, 25%, and 30% respectively using Resveratrol and a normal calorie diet.
Even more impressive is that 1) they lived healthier lives by the prevention and delay of age-related diseases, and 2) even obese animals, who typically have age-related complications, lived normal-aged lives.
Health Benefits
Among the benefits discovered scientific research are:
- Powerful antioxidant
- Anti-inflammatory,
- Blood thinner and anti-coagulant (reduces risk for artery clotting)
- Normalization of blood sugar (for diabetes),
- Increase mental capacity and memory,
- Increase in strength and endurance,
- Removal of amyloid-beta proteins that may cause Alzheimer’s, and
- (even an) Inhibitor of many types of cancers (lung, colon, skin, liver and pancreatic).
Can it really be that all of these age-related issues may be dealt with using simply plant polyphenols compounds? Quite possibly, the answer is yes.
Exclusive Harvard Medical School patent
Vinomis has an exclusive Harvard Medical School license for proprietary science and has formulated its products using these principals. Harvard scientists found that when certain plants are put into a stressed xenohormetic environment (dehydration, infection, heat, cold, extreme UV exposure, etc.) they produce concentrated polyphenols such as Resveratrol and Quercetin. Many grapes are grown under these stressed conditions.
Marywood University study on Vindure 900 combination
In 2006, Xenomis, LLC. conducted a study on humans in conjunction with Dr. James Smoliga of Marywood University using the formulation:
- 400 mg of 98% pure Resveratrol
- 400 mg Red Wine Grape extract
- 100 mg Quercetin
This is the identical combination of ingredients found in Vindure 900.
The Smoliga study showed significant improvements in energy level, strength, endurance, and verbal memory. A second study is underway with 400 mg of pure red wine grape extract.
Naturex French study
Vinomis Red Wine Grape Extract™ uses whole grape extract from Naturex, called PowerGrape. In a study in 2005, a collaboration between researchers from Avantage Nutrition and the French Agronomic Research Institute (INRA), athletes were given 400 mg of Naturex Bordeaux extract per day. Results indicated a reduction in the risk of muscular damage, improvement in sports performance, improved recovery capacity, and improved antioxidant status.
Powerful Antioxidant
Brunswick Laboratories, the leader in antioxidant testing of foods and supplements, has determined that each Vindure 900 tablet from Vinomis Laboratories has an ORAC rating of 19,638, over six times times the USDA recommended daily consumption of at least 3000 ORAC units.
Other Scientific Studies
Grape extract reduces heart disease risk. In 2006, researchers at UC Davis assessed the effect of red grape extract on metabolic syndrome, a combination of factors that increase the risk for heart disease, including high blood pressure, excess abdominal body weight, high blood cholesterol fats and high blood sugar. A study at the University of Wisconsin of 15 adults with coronary artery disease discovered that the flavenoids (types of polyphenols) in red grapes may prevent cardiovascular events.
Resveratrol may block colon cancer. The Cancer Center at UC Irvine, followed up on previous in vitro studies showing that Resveratrol blocks a cellular signaling pathway known as the WNT pathway, which has been linked to more than 85 percent of sporadic colon cancers – the most common form of colon cancer.
Beneficial Effects of Quercetin. At the University of Western Australia, in Perth, a study using 200mg of Quercetin found that dietary flavonoids may improve endothelial function and ultimately lead to beneficial cardiovascular effects.
Grape extract increases energy production in cells – In 2006, athletes in Belgium was given 400 mg of Bordeaux red grape extract per day. Results included a 14% increase in lipophile antioxidant capacity, and a 96% increase in an antioxidant involved in energy production in cells.
Filed under: Articles, Science, resveratrol
