A good year for mouth wash
08 June 2007
Italian researchers have provided another excuse for wine lovers to extol the virtues of their indulgence. A team at the University of Pavia have shown that both red and white wine can kill the bacteria that cause tooth decay.
Gabriella Gazzani and her colleagues selected home-grown Valpolicella and Pinot Nero (Pinot Noir) wines for their study, and tested their antibacterial brawn in a broth of oral streptococci. The wines were 'dealcoholised' prior to the test in order to exclude ethanol's inhibitory effects on bacterial growth.
Wine contains organic acids with known antibacterial effects, including succinic, malic, lactic, tartaric, citric and acetic acids. But Gazzani told Chemistry World that hers was the first study to demonstrate wine's ability to destroy the microbes that have ruined many a smile.
As well as inhibiting growth of the tooth-decay bacteria Streptococcus mutans, the researchers found that the wines inhibited growth of S. pyogenes, the bacteria that infect the upper respiratory tract and cause a condition called 'strep throat', which leaves sufferers with a sore throat and possible fever.
'Our findings suggest that wine might help prevent caries [tooth decay] and upper respiratory tract infection,' concluded Gazzani.
Victoria Gill
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References
M Daglia et al, J. Agric. Food Chem., 2007, Doi: 10.1021/jf070352q
Also of interest
Wine's fruity chemicals sniffed out
Analysis of red wines with mass spectrometers and noses has revealed the chemistry behind their fruitiness
Boosting the paradoxical benefits of white wine
White wine enriched in polyphenols has the same protective effect against atherosclerosis as red wines.
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