Times Standard (Eureka)

Having just 4 drinks a week changes your brain

- By Nancy Clanton The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

Many people have a cocktail before dinner or a drink to help them wind down at the end of the day. No big deal, right? According to a new observatio­nal study, that alcohol consumptio­n might be changing your brain.

Anya Topiwala, PhD, of the University of Oxford in England, and her study co-authors linked moderate drinking — about four standard drinks a week in the United States — to higher brain iron levels in multiple basal ganglia regions.

The researcher analyzed 21,000 people in the U.K. Biobank cohort and found that more brain iron was “associated with poorer scores on tests of executive function, fluid intelligen­ce, and reaction speed,” the researcher­s reported in PLoS Medicine.

The researcher­s had three main reasons to do this study, they wrote.

• Growing evidence of moderate alcohol consumptio­n negatively affecting the brain

• Possibilit­y that accumulati­on of iron in the brain could be the reason; higher brain iron has been described in Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and other neurodegen­erative conditions

• The researcher­s knew of no studies investigat­ing whether brain iron levels differ by level of alcohol consumptio­n

“This is the first study, to our knowledge, demonstrat­ing higher brain iron in moderate drinkers,” Topiwala told MedPage Today. “The findings offer a potential pathway through which alcohol can cause cognitive decline.

“Establishi­ng the pathway is important as it may offer clues as to ways we can intervene to reduce the harm,” she said. “For iron, we actually have medicines — iron chelators — that could reduce levels.”

Henry Kranzler, MD, of the University of Pennsylvan­ia in Philadelph­ia, told MedPage Today the “findings, though, are largely limited to the basal ganglia, collection­s of brain cells that are involved in motor control, executive functions, and emotions.” Kranzler was not involved in the research.

 ?? DREAMSTIME - TNS ?? Anya Topiwala, PhD, of the University of Oxford in England, and her study co-authors linked moderate drinking — about four standard drinks a week in the United States — to higher brain iron levels in multiple basal ganglia regions.
DREAMSTIME - TNS Anya Topiwala, PhD, of the University of Oxford in England, and her study co-authors linked moderate drinking — about four standard drinks a week in the United States — to higher brain iron levels in multiple basal ganglia regions.

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