Cognitive impairment and cerebral atrophy in “heavy drinkers” (original) (raw)

Alcoholism and the Brain: An Overview

2003

; alcoholic brain syndrome; brain atrophy; neuropsychological assessment; neurotransmission; risk factors; comorbidity; disease susceptibility; neuroimaging; treatment factors; survey of research

Frontal Lobe Changes in Alcoholism: A Review of the Literature

Alcohol and Alcoholism, 2001

Alcohol can induce a wide spectrum of effects on the central nervous system. These effects can be recognized at the neurophysiological, morphological and neuropsychological levels. Several studies of the effect of alcohol on the frontal lobes were identified for review from MedLine, PsychLIT databases and by manual searching. In this review article, the different changes are examined in detail. Computed tomography studies have reported changes of frontal lobe in alcoholism, while magnetic resonance imaging studies supported these findings. Neurophysiological studies with positron emission tomography and single photon emission computed tomography have reported a decreased frontal lobe glucose utilization and reduced cerebral blood flow. There is also evidence from neuropsychological studies that there are specific deficits in alcoholism that suggest frontal lobe dysfunction. Considered together, these studies lend a strong credence to the concept of frontal lobe pathology in alcoholism. However, frontal lobe is not an isolated part of the brain and should be considered with its heavy connections to different cortical and subcortical areas of the brain.

Relationship of cerebral ventricular size to alcoholics' performance on the Luria-Nebraska Neuropsychological Battery

Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 1981

SvssssA•v. Cerebral ventricular measurements in alcoholics correlated significantly with scores on the Luria-Nebraska Neuropsychological Battery, indicating a relationship between neuropsychological impairment and cerebral atrophy. LTHOUGH APPARENT cerebral atrophy as well as neuropsychological impairment have been observed in longterm alcoholics, few studies have related the impairment to actual changes in brain structure. Haug (1) first reported that alcoholics judged to be mentally deteriorated were more likely than nondeteriorated alcoholics to show cerebral atrophy. In a sample of 13 alcoholics, Ferrer et al. (2) found a significant correlation (r = .68) between clinical radiological ratings of the atrophy revealed by pneumoencephalography and the combined ratings of impairment measured by the Grassi Block Substitution Test and the Minnesota Percepto-Diagnostic Test. However, these authors failed to correct for the fact that age was also significantly correlated (r = .67) with atrophy in their subjects, which could account for the correlation between atrophy and psychological test performance. Brewer and Perrett (3) correlated the degree of cerebral atrophy shown by pneumoencephalograms in 33 alcoholics with their performance on the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale and the Benton Visual Retention Test. They found correlations ranging from .52 to .31. Cala et al. (4) visually rated computerized tomography (CT)

Impairments of Brain and Behavior The Neurological Effects of Alcohol

1997

Chronic heavy drinking and alcoholism can have serious repercussions for the functioning of the entire nervous system, particularly the brain. These effects include changes in emotions and personality as well as impaired perception, learning, and memory. Neuropathological and imaging techniques have provided evidence of physical brain abnormalities in alcoholics, such as atrophy of nerve cells and brain shrinkage. At the

Alcohol's effects on brain and behavior

Alcohol research & health : the journal of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, 2010

Over the past 40 years, rigorous examination of brain function, structure, and attending factors through multidisciplinary research has helped identify the substrates of alcohol-related damage in the brain. One main area of this research has focused on the neuropsychological sequelae of alcoholism, which has resulted in the description of a pattern of sparing and impairment that provided an essential understanding of the functional deficits as well as of spared capabilities that could be useful in recovery. These studies have elucidated the component processes of memory, problem solving, and cognitive control, as well as visuospatial, and motor processes and their interactions with cognitive control processes. Another large area of research has focused on observable brain pathology, using increasingly sophisticated imaging technologies--progressing from pneumoencephalography to computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), diffusion tensor imaging, and functional MRI--that ...

Brain impairment in well-nourished chronic alcoholics is related to ethanol intake

Annals of Neurology, 1997

To determine the influence of chronic ethanol intake on the central nervous system, we studied 40 asymptomatic, well-nourished, chronic alcoholics (mean age, 42.6 -+ 9.1 years) and 20 age-, sex-, and education-matched control subjects. Studies included neuropsychological testing, visual and short-latency auditory evoked potentials, and morphometric analysis of computed tomography scans. The mean daily ethanol consumption of the alcoholics was 204 gm over an average of 26.4 years. Compared to control subjects, chronic alcoholics exhibited a significant prolongation of the PI00 latency of visual evoked potentials, and a prolongation and reduction in the amplitude of the latency of the V wave of short-latency auditory evoked potentials. These abnormalities were related to the lifetime dose of ethanol consumed. Brain morphometric analysis showed that alcoholics had a significantly greater degree of brain shrinkage with age, compared to control subjects. The cortical atrophy index correlated significantly with the lifetime ethanol consumption. Neuropsychological testing in alcoholics compared to controls revealed a significant impairment of frontal skills that was related to age, degree of scholarship, and the presence of frontal atrophy. In conclusion, well-nourished chronic alcoholics exhibited significant brain impairment, as demonstrated by neuropsychological testing, evoked potentials, and brain morphometric analysis, which was correlated with the lifetime dose of ethanol consumed.

Alcoholism and Brain Damage: Some Psychometric Findings in Addiction Unit Alcoholics

Addiction, 1973

The use of psychometric tests as evidence of brain damage is discussed briejiy, and selected recent literature mentioned Fifty-seven addiction unit alcoholics were examined, using a vocabulary test and a test sensitive to cerebral dysfunction, and compared with a control group of fifty-seven psychkttrk patients with varying degrees of brain damage or dysfunction. It was concluded that very few of the addiction unit alcoholics were suffering from imdoubted brain damage or dysfunction on psychometric evidence, and some implications of this findings are discussed.

Cerebral dysfunction in alcoholism and presenile dementia

Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 1977

Fifteen chronic alcoholics and 15 presenile patients were matched in pairs with regard to their mean hemisphere cerebral blood parametersan index of brain metabolism. The distribution of the regional cerebral blood flow was similar in the two groups. The alcoholics performed significantly better in all psychometric tests than the presenile patients and more alcoholics than presenile patients were still employed and working. Nine presenile patients and one alcoholic showed symptoms indicating brain stem dysfunction.

Cortical Gray Matter Loss in Treatment-Naive Alcohol Dependent Individuals

Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, 2002

Background: Most studies of the impact of alcohol dependence on the brain have examined individuals in treatment. Such samples represent a small proportion of alcoholics in the general population. Such samples may embody a bias (Berkson's fallacy) if the association between variables (for example, alcoholism and cortical gray matter loss) differs between the population of alcoholics in treatment and alcoholics in the general population. Our objective was to determine if treatment-naïve alcoholics show structural brain changes versus controls and to compare our findings with reports evaluating alcoholic samples drawn from treatment populations.