The Province

Drinkers get dementia warning

- LAURA DONNELLY

The majority of cases of early-onset dementia are now caused by alcohol, major research suggests.

A study of more than one million dementia sufferers, published in the journal The Lancet Public Health, shows almost six in 10 diagnoses before the age of 65 are linked to heavy drinking.

Experts said the study showed the burden of disease linked to alcohol was “much larger than previously thought.”

The study tracked more than 31 million patients discharged from hospitals in France between 2008 and 2013, including 1.1 million cases of dementia. Of those, 57,353 patients received their diagnosis before the age of 65.

It found 39 per cent of cases were suffering from alcohol-related brain damage, while a further 18 per cent of sufferers had already been diagnosed as suffering from an alcohol problem.

The study, by the Translatio­nal Health Economics Network in Paris, based at the Sorbonne, did not examine the impact of moderate alcohol intake.

Guidance from Britain’s National Health Service already warns that there is “no safe level of alcohol consumptio­n” when it comes to dementia, with one in three cases of Alzheimer’s disease linked to lifestyle. But experts said more should be done to tackle drinking levels across the population.

“Our findings suggest that the burden of dementia attributab­le to alcohol use disorders is much larger than previously thought, suggesting that heavy drinking should be recognized as a major risk factor for all types of dementia,” the study’s authors said.

Dr. Michael Schwarzing­er, the lead researcher, said the increased risk was likely to be explained by the fact alcohol could cause “permanent structural and functional brain damage.”

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Britain’s National Health Service says there is a strong link between heavy drinking and Alzheimer’s and there is ‘no safe level of alcohol consumptio­n’ for dementia risk.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES Britain’s National Health Service says there is a strong link between heavy drinking and Alzheimer’s and there is ‘no safe level of alcohol consumptio­n’ for dementia risk.

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