By Ashley Welch
June 7,2017
Heavy drinking can
lead to a number of serious health problems, including increased risk of
cancer, heart disease, and
dementia, but consuming even moderate levels of alcohol could be dangerous, as
well, new research suggests.
The study, published in The BMJ, finds that moderate drinkers were three times more
likely to experience a decline in mental skills than people who drank no
alcohol at all.
For the study, researchers analyzed data on weekly alcohol intake in 550
healthy British men and women over a period of 30 years. The participants had
an average age of 43 at the start of the study in 1985 and none were alcohol
dependent.
They were given brain function tests at regular intervals, and during
the last three years of the study participants underwent an MRI brain scan.
The results showed heavy alcohol consumption over
the 30-year period was associated with increased risk of hippocampal atrophy, a
form of brain damage that affects memory and spatial navigation.
Heavy consumption was defined as more than 30 units of alcohol per week,
with one unit of alcohol equivalent to 8 grams. "So a 175ml glass of wine
[14% alcohol] has 2.4 units, and a pint of beer [5.2% alcohol] has 3
units," explains study author Anya Topiwala, a clinical lecturer in the
department of psychiatry at the University of Oxford.
While previous research has suggested light-to-moderate drinking may
have a protective effect on brain health, the new study showed the opposite,
actually finding evidence of harmful associations.
While heavy drinkers were at the highest risk, those drinking moderately
(14 to 21 units per week — about 5 to 7 beers or 6 to 8 glasses of wine) were
three times more likely to have hippocampal atrophy compared with those who did
not drink.
Furthermore, people drinking more than seven units of alcohol per week
experienced a faster decline in language fluency over the study compared to
those who abstained from alcohol.
The authors adjusted for several factors that could have influenced the
results, including age, sex, education, social class, physical and social
activity, smoking, stroke
risk and
medical history.
Topiwala said she was surprised by the findings. "As previous
studies had reported the moderate drinking was protective against cognitive
decline and dementia,
we expected to find a similar association with adverse brain outcomes, which
could underlie the protection," she told CBS News. "Instead we found
the opposite."
While Topiwala acknowledges that more research is needed to confirm the
findings, she said the study has important public health implications.
"I would suggest these findings raise a question mark over the
safety of current U.S. alcohol guidelines, as we found evidence of associations
with multiple harmful brain outcomes in individuals drinking within these
limits," she said.
According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and U.S.
Department of Agriculture's dietary guidelines, moderate
alcohol consumption is
defined as having up to one drink per day for women and up to two drinks per
day for men.
In an accompanying editorial, Killian Welch, consultant
neuropsychiatrist at the Royal Edinburgh Hospital, says the findings
"strengthen the argument that drinking habits many regard as normal have
adverse consequences for health."
"This is important," he writes. "We all use
rationalizations to justify persistence with behaviors not in our long term
interest. With publication of this paper, justification of 'moderate' drinking
on the grounds of brain health becomes a little harder."
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