For the study, researchers examined data from 2008-2013 on more than
31 million French hospital patients, including more than 1 million
who were diagnosed with dementia. About 5 percent of the dementia
patients had so-called early onset dementia that started before age
65, and most of these cases were alcohol-related, the study found.
“Chronic heavy drinking was the most important modifiable risk
factor for dementia onset in both genders and remained so after
controlling for all known risk factors for dementia onset,” said
lead study author Dr. Michael Schwarzinger, chief executive officer
of Translational Health Economics Network and a researcher at INSERM–Universite
Paris Diderot, Sorbonne Paris Cite in France.
Surprisingly, heavy drinkers who got sober didn’t have a lower
dementia risk than their peers who remained problem drinkers,”
Schwarzinger said by email .
“This finding supports that chronic heavy drinking leads to
irreversible brain damage,” Schwarzinger added.
While some previous research suggests that alcohol may lead to
cognitive impairments including a risk of dementia, other studies
have linked light or moderate alcohol use to a healthier brain,
researchers note in the Lancet Public Health.
Globally, an estimated 3.3 million people a year die as a result of
alcohol misuse, accounting for about 6 percent of all deaths,
according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
The WHO defines chronic heavy drinking as more than 60 grams of pure
alcohol, or at least 6 drinks, for men and more than 40 grams, or at
least 4 drinks, for women.
During the study period, 945,512 people were diagnosed with alcohol
use disorders. Most of these cases were alcohol dependency.
Overall, about 3 percent of the dementia cases were attributable to
alcohol-related brain damage, and other alcohol use disorders were
recorded in almost 5 percent of dementia cases.
With early onset dementia cases, however, the connection to alcohol
appeared stronger. About 39 percent of these cases were attributable
to alcohol-related brain damage, and another 18 percent were tied to
other alcohol use disorders.
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Alcohol use disorders were associated with three times the risk of
dementia and twice the risk of early onset cases, the study found.
Excluding alcohol-related brain damage, alcohol use disorders were
still associated with a two times greater risk of vascular and other
dementias.
Alcohol use disorders were also associated with all other
independent risk factors for dementia, such as tobacco smoking, high
blood pressure, diabetes, lower education, depression, and hearing
loss.
The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how drinking might cause dementia or cause cognitive problems to
develop in middle age.
Another limitation is that researchers used hospital administrative
records to identify dementia cases, and it’s possible the condition
might have been recorded when patients had multiple medical
problems, researchers note. Similarly, alcohol use disorders were
identified through records of rehabilitation programs, which might
not include all individuals with drinking problems.
Because the study focused on heavy drinkers, it also doesn’t provide
insight into how much a drink or two a day might be linked to an
increased risk of dementia, if at all.
Even so, the findings add to the evidence that heavy drinking can
lead to cognitive problems, said Clive Ballard co-author of an
accompanying editorial and Dean of the medical school at the
University of Exeter in the U.K.
“Seven drinks per day in men and five drinks per day in women are
harmful to the brain,” Ballard said by email. “But levels of
recommended alcohol consumption are already lower than this, and
this provides additional reinforcement of those recommendations.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2FpdtLp Lancet Public Health, online February
20, 2018.
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