|
MAY 3 - Consumption of large amounts of alcohol over a long period of
time may shrink the brain, researchers say.
Excessive drinking appears to accelerate the natural reduction in
brain size caused by ageing, according to brain scans of more than 1,800
people. The more people drank, regularly, the more that the ratio of
brain volume to skull size fell, especially among older women.
The heaviest drinkers had brains that were up to 1.6 per cent smaller
than non-drinkers, although the researchers have not yet correlated this
with performance in mental tests. The findings, yet to be published,
have been presented to the American Academy of Neurology conference in
Boston.
Volunteers were classified as non-drinkers, former drinkers, low
drinkers (one to seven drinks per week), moderate drinkers (eight to
fourteen drinks) or high drinkers (more than fourteen). Brain volume
decreased 0.25 per cent on average for every jump in drinking category.
There is a natural reduction of about 0.19 per cent every year due to
ageing, researchers said. Women were found to have a reduction of up to
0.29 per cent for every jump in category; for men it was 0.2 per cent.
The volunteers had an average age of 60, with a brain-to-skull ratio
of under 80 per cent of what it was when they were young adults.
Previous studies have suggested that alcohol-dependent people have
smaller brain volumes than others. It is believed that this is due to
ethanol, which causes an alcoholic’s brain to shrink with ageing to a
greater extent.
Carol Ann Paul, a postgraduate researcher from Wellesley College in
Massachusetts, who conducted the study, said yesterday: “Research has
shown that there is a beneficial effect of alcohol in reducing incidence
of cardiovascular disease in people who consume low to moderate amounts
of alcohol.
“However, this study found that greater alcohol consumption was
negatively correlated with brain volume. It is only a snapshot, but
women in their seventies appear to be the most affected by large
amounts.”
People with a 12-year history of heavy drinking had smaller brains
than those who had begun drinking heavily more recently, she said,
adding: “There is a battery of mental tests that we can look at to see
if high levels of reported drinking have an impact on people’s
performance.”
Jeffrey Bird, of the Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience at
University College London, said that the relation between brain size and
intelligence was complicated. “It is widely acknowledged that alcohol
can damage areas of the brain associated with memory and learning, but
the first 25 years of life are the most important in terms of brain
growth, after which it naturally shrinks in size. A bigger brain doesn’t
necessarily mean a better brain,” he said.
A spokesman for the charity Alcohol Concern said: “This study adds to
what we already know, which is that alcohol misuse and dependency can
lead to generalised brain damage and neurological disorders.”
Average household spending on alcohol has risen 21 per cent in
Britain in the past five years, according to the charity.
(Content sourced from The Times, UK) |