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Why do people
get headaches from red wine?
scienceofcooking.com
Red wine
headache ("RWH") is a headache often accompanied by nausea
and flushing that occurs in many people after drinking even a single glass of
red wine.
The condition
does not occur after consumption of white wine or other alcoholic beverages.
Some
individuals report that they get a migraine headache hours later from drinking
some red wines.
No one knows
for certain why this syndrome occurs. It probably has more than one cause.
Sulfites
Since wines
contain a warning label about sulfites many people have assumed that sulfites
are the cause of RWH.
This is not the
case. Almost all wine contains sulfites. Many sweet white wines have more
sulfites than red wines.
Dried fruit and
processed food like lunchmeat have far more sulfites than red wine.
Less than 1% of
the population is sensitive to sulfites.
Histamines
RWH is probably
not caused by histamines except in rare cases.
Red wine has
20-200% more histamines than white, and those who are allergic to them are
deficient in a certain enzyme.
Some experts
believe that the combination of alcohol and that deficiency could cause
headaches.
However, a
study of 16 people with an intolerance to red wine, reported in the Journal
of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (Feb 2001), found no difference in
reactions to low and high histamine wines.
Taking
loratadine (Claritin) an hour before drinking should reduce the reaction to
histamines and the resulting symptoms.
This would tell
an individual whether histamines were the cause of their problem.
Another
solution that has been advanced is to drink a cup of black tea before you drink
the wine.
If one will be
drinking over the course of an evening, have another cup or two of black tea
during the evening.
Quercetin, a
bioflavonoid found in black tea, significantly inhibits the headache/flush
response (which is an inflammatory effect from histamines), according to Tareq
Khan, M.D., a pain expert with St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital in Houston, Texas.
Again, if
histamine is not the cause of a given individual's reaction to wine, the
antihistamine effects of black tea will be of no more help than the
antihistamine effects of loratadine, just as in the example of the previous
paragraph.
Tannins
Other experts
think tannins are at the root of RWH.
Tannins are the
flavonoids in wine that give its degree of mouth-drying bitterness. The taste
is the same as when you bite into a grape skin.
Tannin is a
chemical substance that comes from grape skins, stems, and seeds. The skins
also impart color to wine, which is why red wines typically have a lot more
tannin than whites.
Modern
winemakers take care to minimize undesirable tannins from seeds by crushing
grapes gently when extracting their juice.
Wines can also
take on tannins from the oak or other woods used in wine barrels for storage.
Different woods in different countries affect the type of tannins in the wine.
Tannins help
prevent oxidation, an important role in a wine's aging potential. As age-worthy
red wines mature, tannin molecules gradually accumulate and precipitate out of
the wine in the sediment.
Certain wine
styles have much less tannin content than others, due to reduced maceration
time (grape juice contact with the grape pulp, including sources of tannin such
as stems, seeds).
French reds
from Bordeaux, and Italian reds like Barolo and Barbaresco, are particularly
tannic.
Vintage port is
also very tannic when young, as are wines made from the syrah (shiraz) and
cabernet sauvignon grapes.
French reds
from Burgundy, and Italian wines like Dolcetto and Barbera, are less tannic.
Wines made from
Pinot Noir and Sangiovese grapes, as well as Spanish Riojas are less tannic.
Beaujolais and Tempranillo are also lower tannin wines.
A quick way to
identify these lower tannic wine bottles on a store shelf is to look for the
sloped shoulder "Burgundy bottle".
This is
specially true for European wines, but several new world wineries have also
adopted traditional bottle shapes to help consumers distinguish their wines.
There is a
difference between the varieties and brands of red wine and the amount one can
consume before the headache occurs, but the reports have not been consistent
from person to person.
Considering how
the amount of tannins changes with aging, this would not be surprising.
The Harvard
Health Letter notes several well-controlled experiments showing that
tannins cause the release of serotonin, a neurotransmitter.
High levels of
serotonin can cause headaches and that may happen in people who also suffer
from migraine headaches.
But that does
not explain why people who do not get migraines get RWH.
Dr. Marion
Nestle, chairwoman of the Department of Nutrition and Food Studies at New York
University, added that no one complains about tea, soy, or chocolate headaches
though all contain tannins.
The tannins
that are extracted from grapes found in red wine are primarily condensed
tannins which are polymers of procyanidin monomers.
Hydrolysable
tannins are extracted from the oak wood the wine is aged in. Hydrolysable
tannins are more easily oxidised than condensed tannins.
Prostaglandins
RWH could be
caused by the release of prostaglandins which some people are not able to
metabolize.
Prostaglandins
are substances that can contribute to pain and swelling. Ibuprofen (Advil),
acetaminophen (Tylenol) and aspirin are prostaglandin inhibitors.
Some people get
good results taking a dose of an inhibitor an hour before consuming red wine.
Aspirin and
ibuprofen were shown to be effective at blocking both early and late stages of
the RWH, and acetaminophen was effective in blocking the early stage.
Other possibilities
It has also
been postulated that RWH could be caused by a strain of yeast or bacteria
found in red wine.
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