The neurobehavioral sequelae of moderate drinking lifestyles and acute
alcohol effects with aging
Epidemiological estimates indicate not only an increase in the proportion of older adults, but also an increase in those who continue moderate alcohol consumption. Substantial literatures have attempted to characterize health benefits/risks of moderate drinking lifestyles. Not uncommonly, reports address outcomes in a single outcome, such as cardiovascular function or cognitive decline, rather than providing a broader overview of systems. In a narrative review a team summarises the key findings regarding moderate drinking and three health domains, cardiovascular health, Type 2 diabetes (T2D), and cognition, retaining focus on neurobiological considerations. They comment that few investigators have studied bouts of low/ moderate doses of alcohol consumption, a pattern consistent with moderate drinking lifestyles. Here, the researchers address both moderate drinking as a lifestyle and as an acute event. A review of health-related correlates illustrates continuing inconsistencies. Although substantive reductions in risk for cardiovascular and T2D events are reported, robust conclusions remain elusive. Similarly, whereas moderate drinking is often associated with enhanced cognition and lower dementia risk, few benefits are noted in rates of decline or alterations in brain structure. The effect of sex/gender varies across health domains and by consumption levels. For example, women appear to differentially benefit from alcohol use in terms of T2D, but experience greater risk when considering aspects of cardiovascular function. Finally, the researchers observe that socially relevant alcohol doses do not consistently impair performance in older adults. Rather, older drinkers demonstrate divergent, but not necessarily detrimental, patterns in neural activation and some behavioural measures relative to younger drinkers. Taken together, the epidemiological and laboratory studies reinforce the need for greater attention to key individual differences and for the conduct of systematic studies sensitive to age- related shifts in neurobiological systems. Source: Clarifying the neurobehavioral sequelae of moderate drinking lifestyles and acute alcohol effects with aging. Nixon SJ, Lewis B. Int Rev Neurobiol. 2019;148:39-78.
International Scientific Forum on Alcohol Research
The International Scientific Forum on Alcohol Research (ISFAR) is a group of 45 specialist Professors and Medics who produce balanced and well researched analysis of emerging research papers alcohol and health.