Source: Independent, The (UK)
Contact:  http://www.independent.co.uk/ 
Pubdate: Fri, 21 Aug 1998
Author: Jeremy Laurance, Health Editor

CLAIM THAT A GLASS OF WINE CAN CAUSE INFERTILITY LEAVES DRINKERS CONFUSED

The more alcohol women drink the less likely they are to conceive.
Researchers have found that even moderate drinkers consuming one glass
of wine or beer a day were half as likely to get pregnant within six
months as those who drank nothing.

The study, published in the British Medical Journal, is the first to
suggest that moderate drinking can affect women's fertility. It is
known that heavy drinking reduces a woman's chances of conceiving but,
until now, it was thought that the occasional glass of wine or beer
would do an intending mother no harm.

The finding will add to public confusion over whether drinking is good
or bad for health. A wealth of research on the effects of alcohol,
much of it conflicting, has left the average drinker bemused about the
number of drinks safely permitted and whether they will increase or
decrease the average lifespan (see panel).

In the latest investigation, Danish researchers, who studied 430
couples aged 20-35 who were trying to conceive for the first time,
found that those women drinking one to five units a week were a third
less likely to conceive within six months than those who drank
nothing. (A unit is a glass of wine, half a pint of beer or a single
measure of spirits.)

Those who drank six to ten units a week reduced their chances by
almost half, and those who drank more than 10 units cut their chances
by two thirds. Drinking appeared to have no effect on the fertility of
the men.

Dr Tina Jenson, of the National University Hospital in Copenhagen,
said: "I expected to find an effect of alcohol but not at these low
doses. That is what surprised me."

Dr Jenson said that buying a bottle of champagne and going out for a
meal could be an effective prelude to sexual intercourse, but all the
couples in the study were trying to start a family and did not have
problems with sex.

The drinkers had sexual intercourse slightly more often than the
non-drinkers, with more than a third of the drinkers reporting having
sex between seven and ten times each month compared with a quarter of
the non-drinkers. To correct for the effect of extra sex, the study
excluded couples who did not have intercourse between day 11 and day
20 of the woman's menstrual cycle, when the chances of conceiving are
highest.

Dr Jenson and her colleagues concluded: "This finding needs further
corroboration [by other studies] but it seems reasonable to encourage
women to reduce their intake of alcohol or not to drink at all when
they are trying to become pregnant."

It is not known how alcohol affects fertility, but animal studies have
shown that it can provoke spontaneous abortion.

One hypothesis is that alcohol may interfere with the process of
ovulation, the transport of the egg down the Fallopian tube and its
implantation in the womb after fertilisation.

Dr Jenson said: "It is fantastic that the egg can be implanted in this
way. It is a delicate process and it is not difficult to imagine why
women's fertility might be more susceptible to the effects of alcohol
than men's."

Among pregnant women, heavy drinking is linked with a higher incidence
of miscarriages, still births and premature births.

Dr Jenson said a possible reason the effects of moderate drinking on
conception had been missed in earlier studies was that personal
estimates of the amount drunk were notoriously unreliable. "Other

studies have asked women what they drank on average.

"We went back every month and asked them what they had drunk. Some
told me that they had had a hen night that month and drank 20 units.
So we got a more accurate picture."

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Checked-by: Rich O'Grady