Heavy drinkers are at
serious risk of dementia, according to a newly published study that analyzed
more than a million patients diagnosed with the illness between 2008 and 2013.
The study, published Tuesday in the Lancet
Public Health journal, included 1,109,343 dementia patients discharged from
French hospitals during the period.
“Alcohol use disorders were the strongest
modifiable risk factor for dementia onset,” the study concluded.
Researchers said nearly 40 per cent of the
57,353 cases of early-onset dementia (below 65 years) were directly
alcohol-related, and 17.6 per cent had an additional diagnosis of alcohol use
disorders.
They advised screening for heavy drinking be
part of regular medical care, with intervention or treatment offered when
necessary.
“What is most surprising about this paper is
that it has taken us so long to recognize that alcohol misuse and dependence
are such potent risk factors for the development of dementia,” Robert Howard,
professor of old age psychiatry at University College London, was quoted by The
Guardian as saying.
Lead author Michael Schwarzinger also noted in
the report that the research showed damage done to the brain by alcohol is
never repaired.
For heavy drinkers who had been sober for a
time, the level of risk of dementia is “about the same”, he said.
PMNEWS
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