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Despite {{U}}(1) {{/U}} that alcoholic beverages may {{U}}(2) {{/U}}, a leading medical expert is advising: don't {{U}}(3) {{/U}} just yet.
Anybody who's ever worked in a hospital sees the hospital is full of patients that have {{U}}(4) {{/U}} disease, but the hospital is not full of patients that have disease related to cholesterol and {{U}}(5) {{/U}}.
In an {{U}}(6) {{/U}} in the current New England Journal of Medicine, Dr. Goldberg of Columbia University said it is time to see {{U}}(7) {{/U}} prevents heart disease. Such a study would give {{U}}(8) {{/U}} to one group of heart disease patients and not to another, and see {{U}}(9) {{/U}}.
In the latest study, which followed {{U}}(10) {{/U}} over a 12-year period, researchers found that those who drank {{U}}(11) {{/U}} drinks per week {{U}}(12) {{/U}} of heart attack by {{U}}(13) {{/U}} compared to {{U}}(14) {{/U}}.
The lead author, {{U}}(15) {{/U}} Kenneth Mukamal of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, insists his study is {{U}}(16) {{/U}}. For one thing, other studies have not looked at {{U}}(17) {{/U}}.
Dr. Mukamal says {{U}}(18) {{/U}} also appear to settle which alcoholic beverage are {{U}}(19) {{/U}}. "Beer and spirits, beer and liquor, were most strongly {{U}}(20) {{/U}}."
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