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How Alcohol Ages the Brain

February 06, 2020 4 min read

Alcohol Effects on the Brain | Arepa

When we think about alcohol's impact on the brain, we typically think in extremes. Binge drinking can alter brain anatomy and personality in teens, alcohol abuse can leave the brain struggling to repair damage weeks after going dry. Rarely do we consider the slow, measured effects of years of drinking on the brain, but new research is demonstrating just how much every drop counts.

According to an analysis of brain images taken from 11,651 participants in the UK Biobank, a national health register in the United Kingdom, every gram of alcohol consumed per day was linked to 0.02 years of brain aging — that's about a week of additional aging in the brain.

Cumulatively, people who reported drinking every day or on most days, had about 5 months (0.4 years) of additional aging in their brains compared to people who were the same chronological age as them, but reported less frequent drinking, the study finds. That suggests that their frequent drinking habit aged their brains at an accelerated rate.

 

EVERY GRAM OF ALCOHOL CONSUMED PER DAY LINKED TO A WEEK OF ADDITIONAL AGING IN THE BRAIN

The good news is that these changes are relatively modest. Arthur Toga, the study's senior author and professor at University of Southern California, tells Inverse that it's unclear how these changes in the brain actually affect people's quality of life. But the bad news is that they're still significant.

"The 0.4 years of difference was statistically significant. We suggest that daily or almost daily alcohol consumption can be detrimental to the brain," Toga says.

The paper was published Thursday in the journal Scientific Reports.

 

What speeds up aging in the brain?

The researchers estimate Relative Brain Age using MRI scans gathered from 5,193 participants. The metric offers a way to compare brain aging amongst people who are all the same chronological age, and illuminate how outside influences can lead someone's brain to age at a different rate relative to their peers.

The scans record decreases in the brains white matter (densely connected nerve fibers that help usher electrical signals through the brain) grey matter (another type of brain tissue that wastes away as cognitive function declines) and other metrics related to brain volume associated with brain aging.

How fast a person's brain ages depends on both genetics and the environment — and that includes our habits. In the study, the team zeroed in on smoking and drinking habits among 11,651 participants.

When it came to booze, the biggest effects on brain aging were seen in those who drank the most alcohol – people who reported drinking every day or on "most days". People who drank that much had brains about five months older on average than people of the same biological age who drank less frequently.

Cigarette smoking may have an even more dramatic aging effect, the study suggests. Each year spent smoking one pack of cigarettes per day led to about about 11 additional days (0.03 years) of brain aging, the team calculated. Over time, that meant that those who smoked most often — usually every day — had brains between 6-7 months older on average than those who smoked less frequently or not at all.

Giuseppe Barisano, a post-doctoral research fellow at USC tells Inverse that these differences in brain age may be clinically relevant for heavy drinkers or smokers in the future. Barisano has worked with Toga before, but was not involved in this current study.

"Even though plus 0.4 and plus 0.6 years of relative brain age may look small and not significant, these numbers are actually important, especially since they are associated with a corresponding and significant worse cognitive function," Barisano says.

 

Outperforming a changing brain

Though genetics are beyond our control, the study points to how lifestyle choices usher the brain down the path of aging. Some of the best ways to preserve the brain are also a matter of lifestyle changes. An easy trick is to find healthy alternatives for what you love, read here why Ārepa is the best red wine substitute.

The changes in Relative Brain Age weren't significantly higher between people who reported smoking "occasionally" and those who smoked every day or on most days, Barisano says. That suggests "some of the damages related to smoking can be stopped and in some cases even reverted by smoking cessation — for example, heart and blood vessel damage," he says.

Other research suggests we could help protect our brains and bodies not just by quitting bad habits, but by embracing good ones.

For example, a study published in December 2019 suggests that interventions like exercise and maintaining a "cognitively active" lifestyle can drastically slow the rate of cognitive decline, even in patients who carried a gene linked to a type of dementia that made drastic anatomical changes to their brain basically inevitable.

In a sample of 105 people with the gene, the researchers found that those who lived physically and cognitively active lives had 55 percent slower rates of decline compared to those who didn't live actively. If you are wondering, a cognitively active lifestyle included habits like reading, doing puzzles, going to cultural events or, in short, the active pursuit of learning new things.

Importantly, the study participants didn't seen any restoration of the brain volume they had lost. Instead, they were "outperforming" the brain volume they already had. They were able to do more with less.

In a previous interview with Inverse, that study's first author Kaitlin Casaletto called exercise and cognitively active lifestyles "the best current tools we have to prevent cognitive decline."

The research illuminates the fact that we're not completely powerless over how our brains age: our actions resonate in our brains over time, for better or worse.

 

Source: https://www.inverse.com/mind-body/alcohol-and-the-brain-how-much-booze-ages-the-mind

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