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Health
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Title: It's Official: Drunks Have Small Minds
Source: Capital Hill Blue
URL Source: http://www.capitolhillblue.com/artman/publish/article_6877.shtml
Published: Jun 15, 2005
Author: Lee Bowman
Post Date: 2005-06-15 22:57:46 by Zipporah
Keywords: Official:, Drunks, Small
Views: 119
Comments: 16

New research is beginning to explain how the brains of alcoholics become smaller and lighter compared to those of non-drinkers, and what functions may be lost due to chronic drinking.

Scientists believe a number of factors - including alcohol's toxic byproducts, malnutrition, even cirrhosis of the liver - interact in complex ways to cause brain damage.

A compilation of studies on alcohol-related brain shrinkage presented by researchers at a symposium in Germany last fall is being published Wednesday in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research.

The researchers used human and animal studies to map the damage.

Alcohol appears to be particularly damaging to the "white matter" or "hard wiring" _ fat-insulated nerve fibers that allow brain cells to rapidly communicate with other parts of the brain _ according to Dr. Clive Harper, a professor of neuropathology at the University of Sydney in Australia and organizer of the symposium.

Alcoholics can also have shrinkage or retraction of dendrites. These shorter connective fibers allow each nerve cell to "talk" with as many as 10,000 neighboring neurons at a time.

"The most important permanent structural change is nerve-cell loss," Harper said. "Some nerve cells cannot be replaced _ those in the frontal cortex, the cerebellum and several regions deep in the brain."

A separate study on mice, published in the same journal but not one of the symposium reports, showed that continuous drinking for as little as eight weeks can produce deficits in learning and memory that continue for up to 12 weeks after drinking stops.

"The learning and memory deficits we found in our mice ... affect all types of learning and memory," said Susan Farr, an associate professor of medicine at St. Louis University and an author of the study. "We found deficits in every type of task we tested the mice in."

Previous studies had suggested that mice had to drink steadily for six months or more to experience permanent deficits.

"Drinking doesn't just produce a hangover," said D. Allan Butterfield, a professor of biological and physical chemistry at the University of Kentucky. "Chronic drinking may lead to permanent cognitive deficits," he added, noting that the findings should be of particular concern to college students who engage in binge drinking.

Farr said it's difficult to make precise comparisons between the alcohol dosing of 8-week-old mice and humans.

"This would be equivalent to a human that drank six to eight beers or a bottle of wine every day for six years, and could experience learning and memory deficits for up to nine years after they stopped drinking," she said.

But Harper said many studies show that some brain functions improve with abstinence over time.

"Although working memory, postural stability and visual-spatial ability may continue to show impairment for weeks to months with sobriety, with prolonged sobriety, these brain functions can show improvement."

Harper also noted that, in animal experiments, dendrites that shrink with chronic alcohol use "have been shown to grow and spread again after periods of abstinence _ weeks to months _ and have been accompanied by improved brain function."

Although it is widely accepted that a predisposition to alcoholism has a genetic component, researchers are still trying to assess how much the physical damage from alcohol further affects the wiring of addiction.

For instance, one study based on autopsies found that genes controlling the manufacture of proteins that help produce nerve insulation _ myelin _ were suppressed in the brain tissue of alcoholics compared with such genes in non-alcoholics.


Poster Comment:

Something I already knew..

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#1. To: Zipporah (#0)

It's Official: Drunks Have Small Minds

Similar phenomena would most likely be evident in Bushbots. Officially, of course.

If you love America, you'll hate Israel.

wbales  posted on  2005-06-15   23:02:05 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Zipporah (#0)

"Chronic drinking may lead to permanent cognitive deficits,"

you know how with some posters you wonder, what the heck?? :P

christine  posted on  2005-06-15   23:11:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: christine (#2)

Opps.

Huh?

rack42  posted on  2005-06-15   23:14:21 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: wbales (#1)

Similar phenomena would most likely be evident in Bushbots. Officially, of course.

Also.. brings to mind some interesting statements not only by Bushbots..

"It seemed like to me they based some of their decisions on the word of — and the allegations — by people who were held in detention, people who hate America, people that had been trained in some instances to disassemble — that means not tell the truth." —George W. Bush, on an Amnesty International report on prisoner abuse at Guantanamo Bay, Washington, D.C., May 31, 2005 (Listen to audio)

"See, in my line of work you got to keep repeating things over and over and over again for the truth to sink in, to kind of catapult the propaganda." —George W. Bush, Greece, N.Y., May 24, 2005 (Listen to audio)

"We discussed the way forward in Iraq, discussed the importance of a democracy in the greater Middle East in order to leave behind a peaceful tomorrow." —George W. Bush, Tbilisi, Georgia, May 10, 2005

"I think younger workers — first of all, younger workers have been promised benefits the government — promises that have been promised, benefits that we can't keep. That's just the way it is." —George W. Bush, Washington, D.C., May 4, 2005

"It means your own money would grow better than that which the government can make it grow. And that's important." —George W. Bush, on what private accounts could do for Social Security funds, Falls Church, Va., April 29, 2005

"It's in our country's interests to find those who would do harm to us and get them out of harm's way." —George W. Bush, Washington, D.C., April 28, 2005

Turning away....

Zipporah  posted on  2005-06-15   23:15:21 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: rack42, christine (#3)

Opps.

Huh?

Present company excluded :P

Turning away....

Zipporah  posted on  2005-06-15   23:16:07 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: wbales (#1)

Similar phenomena would most likely be evident in Bushbots.

ha! maybe we should start a thread on the parallels. ;)

christine  posted on  2005-06-15   23:16:10 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: rack42 (#3)

i did not have you in mind, rack. ;)

christine  posted on  2005-06-15   23:19:38 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: christine (#7)

This is clearly discriminatory towards Irish folks...imagine James Joyce writing w/o Jamesons or U2 w/o without carbombs...

Mundus vult decipi, ergo decipiatur.

Eoghan  posted on  2005-06-15   23:23:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: christine (#2)

Chronic drinking may lead to permanent cognitive deficits,"

you know how with some posters you wonder, what the heck?? :P

christine posted on 2005-06-15 23:11:15 ET Reply Trace Private Reply

So, how can you tell the difference.

Alot of things may lead to permanet cognitive deficints. As does chronic work.

tom007  posted on  2005-06-15   23:31:44 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Zipporah (#0)

Drink and thrive: Moderate alcohol use reduces dementia risk Ben Harder

Alcohol doesn’t often get billed as a brain food, but new research suggests that booze offers at least one cerebral benefit. It may reduce aging drinkers’ risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia.

Although extreme alcohol consumption kills brain cells, there’s contradictory evidence about whether long-term drinking has permanent effects on cognitive abilities such as reasoning and memory. Prolonged, excessive drinking can lead to the liver disease cirrhosis and may contribute to breast cancer risk, however. Drinking is also responsible for many accidental injuries and deaths.

Nevertheless, alcohol in moderation promotes cardiovascular health by boosting concentrations of good cholesterol and inhibiting the formation of dangerous blood clots (SN: 2/28/98, p. 142: http://www.sciencenews.org/sn_arc98/2_28_98/bob1.htm). Additional compounds in red wine seem to benefit the heart and blood vessels (SN: 1/5/02, p. 8: Available to subscribers at http://www.sciencenews.org/20020105/note11.asp). Drinking also appears to guard against macular degeneration, an incurable eye disease.

Now, the brain joins the list of organs that seem to benefit from alcohol.

From 1990 to 1999, Monique M.B. Breteler and her colleagues at the Erasmus Medical Centre in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, observed 5,395 individuals age 55 and older who didn’t initially show signs of dementia. Of these participants, 1,443 “moderate drinkers” reported having one to three alcohol beverages of some sort each day, while 2,674 said they consumed less than one drink and 165 acknowledged having four or more drinks per day. Another 1,113 participants abstained altogether.

Over an average follow-up period of 6 years, 146 participants developed Alzheimer’s disease and another 51 got some other form of age-related dementia. That put overall risk for dementia at 3.7 percent. Risk was about 4 percent among nondrinkers, light drinkers, and heavy drinkers, but only 2.6 percent of the moderate drinkers developed dementia.

Once the researchers adjusted their data to account for participants’ sex, age, weight, blood pressure, use of tobacco, and other factors that influence dementia, moderate drinkers showed only 58 percent the risk of dementia calculated for nondrinkers, Breteler’s team reports in the Jan. 26 Lancet.

Moderate drinkers had an even more marked decrease in vascular dementia, a condition in which blockages in blood vessels in the brain cause recurring, minor strokes that gradually erode cognitive ability. The researchers hypothesize that since vascular disorders are linked to dementia in elderly people, alcohol’s benefits to blood vessels might indirectly sustain brain function.

Jean-Marc Orgogozo, a neurological epidemiologist at the University of Bordeaux in France hails the study. He and his colleagues have found that French wine drinkers over the age of 65 have a reduced risk of dementia. The new research supports that finding, shows that beer and hard liquor—not just wine—are protective, and establishes the effect in somewhat younger people, he says.

John R. Copeland, a psychiatrist who’s retired from the University of Liverpool in England, calls the Dutch finding “very interesting but not unexpected.” Although Copeland’s research suggested that heavy, long-term drinking reduces cognitive ability in elderly men, people who show benefits in the new study consumed alcohol in more modest, “therapeutic quantities,” he says.

However, Orgogozo questions exactly what quantity constitutes a happy-hour medium. His own past research suggests three to four drinks per day are required to help ward off dementia. The lower threshold for benefit in the Dutch study may reflect participants’ underreporting of alcohol consumption in a country that, unlike France, attaches a stigma to drinking, Orgogozo says.

Bottom line is intellegent people tend to want an escape and alcohol being legal is the drug of choice. Demonize it all you want but the truth has been documented......

timetobuildaboat  posted on  2005-06-16   4:52:24 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: All (#10)

Now, the brain joins the list of organs that seem to benefit from alcohol.

Time to accept the truth.....ugly as it is....

timetobuildaboat  posted on  2005-06-16   4:55:57 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: Zipporah (#5)

Alcohol and it’s benefits explained….. Inhibitions: we all have them and they tend to inhibit our “voice”. Alcohol eliminates this obstacle and allows the user to speak or and share ideas that might be considered taboo, therefore opening up our dialog allowing us discuss topics that might offend. This is necessary to venture into realms that need discussion. Freedom is a tough thing and must always have it’s boundary’s defined. It’s a relentless and continual process that must be expressed……..

timetobuildaboat  posted on  2005-06-16   5:21:19 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: timetobuildaboat (#10)

I'm sure it helps people forget. Although I'm not sure it is target specific enough. Which may be why more drinking is "necessary".

robin  posted on  2005-06-16   8:26:09 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#14. To: Zipporah (#0)

This would be equivalent to a human that drank six to eight beers or a bottle of wine every day for six years, and could experience learning and memory deficits for up to nine years after they stopped drinking," she said.

Y'all have to forgive me when I don't make sense. I've only been sober for a little over six years and I drank at the above rate and sometimes more for much longer than that.

My father died of cirrhosis at age 60. It's a slow, excruciatingly painful way to die. He lost his wife and all his friends. I was literally the only soul left on this planet who cared about him. And that, I'm afraid, was only because we had so much in common as drunks.

There are certain people such as my late father and myself for whom "moderate" drinking is by definition impossible. They are termed alcoholics.

I don't begrudge anyone who can drink in moderation their right to do so. And I would never label it as being "of the devil" the way the local Southern Baptist pastor does. When I was going to his First 'Bushtist' Church where holy preemptive war is always righteous so long as Baptist youth can support those deployed overseas on the homefront by "bathing them in prayer," the pastor preached an irate sermon one day emphasizing to us that it was impossible that the Lord Jesus would have turned water into alcoholic wine because "our Lord would not create something that just causes a person to act a fool!"

Sam Houston  posted on  2005-06-16   8:33:39 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#15. To: Sam Houston (#14)

First 'Bushtist' Church

LOL!

´Easier to Find Baptists than Rabbis´ Against Evacuation (Gaza)

Baptists in Gaza

There are certain people such as my late father and myself for whom "moderate" drinking is by definition impossible. They are termed alcoholics.

There is a genetic component to alcoholism. My cousin who died of it, told me once that studies indicate people from around the North Sea fall into one group. My gr-grandparents (they founded more than one Baptist church in California, like his parents in Missouri, and before that in Tennessee and KY) each had an alcoholic brother, and so my relatives and family mostly stay away from it.

robin  posted on  2005-06-16   8:56:04 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#16. To: robin (#13)

I'm sure it helps people forget. Although I'm not sure it is target specific enough. Which may be why more drinking is "necessary".

Or why we drink "more than we should" on a work night ;)

Boy if it were target specific I could see myself becoming an alcoholic.

timetobuildaboat  posted on  2005-06-16   14:17:58 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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