Fein George, McGillivray Shannon
Neurobehavioral Research, Inc., Corte Madera, California 94925, and Honolulu, Hawaii, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2007 Nov;31(11):1788-99. doi: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2007.00481.x. Epub 2007 Sep 14.
To date, there is a wealth of literature describing the deleterious effects of active alcoholism on cognitive function. There is also a growing body of literature on the extent of cognitive recovery that can occur with abstinence. However, there is still a dearth of published findings on cognitive functioning in very long-term abstinence alcoholics, especially in the elderly population.
The current study examines 91 elderly abstinent alcoholics (EAA) (49 men and 42 women) with an average age of 67.3 years, abstinent for an average of 14.8 years (range 0.5 to 45 years), and age and gender comparable light/nondrinking controls. The EAA group was divided into 3 subgroups: individuals that attained abstinence before age 50 years, between the ages 50 and 60 years, and after age 60 years. Attention, verbal fluency, abstraction/cognitive flexibility, psychomotor, immediate memory, delayed memory, reaction time, spatial processing, and auditory working memory were assessed. The AMNART and cranium size were used as estimates of brain reserve capacity, and the association of all variables with alcohol use measures was examined.
Overall, the EAA groups performed comparably to controls on the assessments of cognitive function. Only the abstinent in group before 50 years of age performed worse than controls, and this was only in the domain of auditory working memory. EAAs had larger craniums than their controls. This effect was strongest for those who drank the longest and had the shortest abstinence. Such individuals also performed better cognitively.
Our data showed that elderly alcoholics that drank late into life, but with at least 6 months abstinence can exhibit normal cognitive functioning. Selective survivorship and selection bias probably play a part in these findings. Cognitively healthier alcoholics, with more brain reserve capacity, may be more likely to live into their 60s, 70s, or 80s of age with relatively intact cognition, and to volunteer for studies such as this. Our results do not imply that all elderly alcoholics with long-term abstinence will attain normal cognition.
迄今为止,有大量文献描述了酒精成瘾对认知功能的有害影响。关于戒酒所能实现的认知恢复程度的文献也在不断增加。然而,关于长期戒酒的酗酒者,尤其是老年人群体的认知功能,仍缺乏已发表的研究结果。
本研究调查了91名老年戒酒酗酒者(EAA)(49名男性和42名女性),平均年龄67.3岁,平均戒酒14.8年(范围0.5至45年),以及年龄和性别匹配的轻度饮酒/不饮酒对照组。EAA组分为3个亚组:50岁之前戒酒的个体、50至60岁之间戒酒的个体以及60岁之后戒酒的个体。对注意力、语言流畅性、抽象/认知灵活性、心理运动能力、即时记忆、延迟记忆、反应时间、空间处理能力和听觉工作记忆进行了评估。使用AMNART和颅骨大小作为脑储备能力的估计指标,并研究了所有变量与酒精使用指标之间的关联。
总体而言,EAA组在认知功能评估中的表现与对照组相当。只有50岁之前戒酒组的表现比对照组差,且仅在听觉工作记忆方面。EAA的颅骨比对照组大。这种影响在饮酒时间最长且戒酒时间最短的个体中最为明显。这些个体在认知方面的表现也更好。
我们的数据表明,晚年饮酒但至少戒酒6个月的老年酗酒者可表现出正常的认知功能。选择性生存和选择偏倚可能在这些结果中起了作用。认知更健康、脑储备能力更强的酗酒者,可能更有可能在60多岁、70多岁或80多岁时仍保持相对完整的认知,并自愿参与此类研究。我们的结果并不意味着所有长期戒酒的老年酗酒者都能达到正常认知水平。