Regular moderate alcohol consumption may be a protective
factor for cardiovascular disease. However, the effect
of alcohol consumption immediately prior to cardiovascular
events has not been studied extensively. Researchers conducted
a “case-crossover” study in 250 first-time nonfatal
acute myocardial infarction (AMI) cases to assess the influence
of alcohol consumption in the 12 hours preceding
AMI. Each case served as its own control; i.e., the control
information for each subject was based on his or her own
past behavior. The 12 hours preceding AMI was considered
the hazard period, while the corresponding time period a
week before AMI was the control period.
Drinking any alcohol in the hazard period increased
the risk for AMI threefold (odds ratio [OR], 3.1); even
moderate drinking (U24 g of ethanol for women and
U36 g for men) more than doubled it (OR, 2.3).
Of the 187 subjects who drank any alcohol, 15 men
and 2 women reported heavy episodic drinking (4+
drinks per occasion for women and 5+ drinks for
men). The association between heavy episodic drinking
and AMI was not significant (OR, 3.0).
These results were not influenced by known risk factors
for AMI (age, gender, smoking status, family history
of AMI, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes,
prior unstable angina pectoris, physical exertion
shortly before the event, psychological stress, or cocaine
use) in adjusted analyses.
Compared with an age- and sex-matched general
population sample, subjects with AMI had more frequent
heavy episodic drinking (less than monthly, 21%
versus 11%; monthly or more, 7% versus 3%) and were
more likely to drink irregularly, i.e., less than weekly
(29% versus 16%).
Comments: Drinking any alcohol increased the risk for AMI in
the next 12 hours in this study. Researchers were not able
to demonstrate a significant association between heavy episodic
drinking and AMI due to the small number of exposed
subjects; however, the sample had higher rates of heavy and
irregular drinking compared with the general population,
giving some support to the hypotheses that heavy drinking
increases AMI risk, and that pattern of drinking is important
when assessing the risk for cardiovascular events. The relationship
between alcohol use and cardiovascular events is
likely not as simple as is commonly thought.
Source: Gerlich MG, Krämer A, Gmel G, et al. Patterns
Gerlich MG, Krämer A, Gmel G, et al. Patterns
of alcohol consumption and acute myocardial infarction: a
case-crossover analysis. Eur Addict Res. 2009;15(3):143–149
