Mark Henderson, Science Editor
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Wines from 13 different countries contain potentially hazardous levels of metals, according to a chemical analysis by British scientists.
The findings suggest that the health benefits of drinking red wine may often be counter-balanced by risks posed by excessive levels of metals such as copper, manganese and vanadium, researchers at Kingston University said.
Wines whould also be labelled with their ion metal content, and manufacturers need to introduce new methods to remove the potentially hazardous material from their products, they said. Metal ions are charged atoms, which play an important role in body biochemistry but which can also be hazardous in excess amounts.
The study, by Professor Declan Naughton and Andrea Petróczi, used a system of risk assessment known as target hazard quotients (THQ), developed by the US Environmental Protection Agency, to examine the risks from metal ions in wine.
The THQ gives an indication of risk based on published upper safe limits for chemicals, and probable levels of consumption and body weight. A value of one is considered safe, though higher scores may also pose no risk because the system is designed to avoid underestimating hazards.
Only wines from Italy, Argentina and Brazil did not exceed the threshold risk THQ of one, the scientists reported. Wines from other countries, including popular producers such as France, Germany, Austria and Portugal, regularly exceeded this.
Typical THQ values ranged from 30 to 80, while Huungarian and Slovakian wines reached as high as 300. Both red and white wines scored poorly in the survey. Details of the research are published in Chemistry Central Journal.
“These values are concetning, in that they are mainly above the THQ value of 1.0,” Professor Naughton said. “Excess intake of metal ions is credited with pathological events such as Parkinson’s disease.
“In addition to neurological problems, these ions are also believed to enhance oxidative damage, a key component of chronic inflammatory disease which is a suggested initiator of cancer.”
The health-enhancing properties of red wine are generally attributed to the presence of antioxidant chemicals, which can fight oxygen damage to cells. Metal ions, however, can promote this oxidative process, and excessive amounts may thus counteract any health benefit of drinking wine.
The scientists said: “The results from this study also question a popular belief about the health-giving properties of red wine: that drinking red wine daily protects you from heart attacks is often related to levels of anti-oxidants. However, the finding of hazardous levels of metal ions, which can be pro-oxidants, leads to a major question mark over the protective benefits of red wine.
“Levels of metal ions should appear on wine labels, along with the introduction of further steps to remove key hazardous metal ions during wine production.”
In a separate study, published in the journal Nature, scientists have found that eating red meat could “prime” the body for infection by the food-poisoning bacterium Escherichia coli.
esearch led by Professor Ajit Varki, of the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, has found that red meat releases a type of sugar molecule called Neu5Gc that is not normally found in human cells. This sugar is targeted by a potent bacterial toxin produced by E. coli, and may thus make infections more likely and more virulent.
Professor Varki said: “Ironically, humans may set themselves up for an increased risk of illness from this kind of E. coli bacteria present in contaminated red meat or dairy, because these very same products have high levels of Neu5Gc.”

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No a word, strangely, about where the metal ions might originate from. Is it additives (that wines are stuffed with)? The regional differences might point to that. If not, then what? Metals are used in pest control as well, so is that it? Nice plug of Italian wine, now the solution please.
Edgar, nietterzake, Netherlands
I have always been intolerant of red wine , from the very first sip out of the glass I feel an intense pain in my stomach , now I know why , if it contains metal substances should the methods not be reconsidered and what else is in red wine or even any other alcohol we all drink for that matter?
Tracey Joiner, Tipton, england
Yet Alex from reading, yet!
Louise Mian, London, UK
I saw the dispatches tv prog a month ago and it showed the
rubbish (i.e. they tipped Paris's rubbish on all Champagnes vineyards land ) strewn around including syringes,condoms
that they grow the Champagne grapes on. Also they told of
the additives put into red wine. I will not drink wine again.
John, woking, surrey
Well, I know that loads of people drink copious amounts of wine, and none have contracted Parkinson's disease, or any other mental disorder for that matter.
Alex, Reading,
A marvellous spot to Italian (and few others) wine!
So, please, save water, drink Italian wine, healthy and delicious. The matter is more complicated, but too many foods coming from a lot of countries have "strange" things inside...
What about Chinese food?
Let's keep our eyes opened
Franco Natalini, Milan, Italy
This is what education, education, education does for us. Too many scientists with nothing meaningful to do so they set out to make a name by fightening us to death!
I've enjoyed a bottle of red wine with daily doses of red meat for years and can still happily do a day's work at nearly 70.
A.Williams, Cradley Heath,
Reply J Kidd,Birmingham,you forgot that taxes are about to go up!
Mike, Lincoln, UK
If this is the case, then in those countries whose populations regularly consume wine, we would expect to see higher than average rates of Parkinson's disease and cancers. It would be easy to perform epidemiological studies to test this. This has not been done. The results, in isolation, mean zero.
Rick Hart, Burton Latimer, UK
Scientistists have more opinions than there are stars in the sky.They never prove themselves wrong ,leaving that up to other scientists.
geert, Cape Town, South Africa
Why bother to live?
Can't drink (alcohols, coffees or teas), nor drive ,nor walk on roads, nor smoke, & foods have 'bad' additives... The atmosphere is polluted and so on...Poor us.
John Kidd, Birmingham, UK