counter customizable free hit
Alcohol consumption after age 75 associated with lower risk of developing dementia

 

 


 

 

 


 

New: Complete resources for America's Caregivers...click here      Affordable, quality walkers, wheelchairs, canes improve Elderly mobility, independence...click here
America's Seniors General Store--selection, value on thousands of items...click here     Seniors' Health, Personal Care--Order quality, affordable items from the privacy of your home...click here   Vitamins, nutrients can protect health and boost Successful Aging...click here      Diet, quality foods add to longevity, successful aging...shop from home...click here

 
 


 

 

 

 

Home
Up
Adverse Effects Drugs
African-American Risk
Aging Gene Link
Alcohol Fights Dementia
Alcohol Over 75 Years Old
Alzheimer's and the Law
Alzheimer_Resources
Alzheimer's and Stars
Alzheimer Caregiving Tips
Alzheimer's and Obesity
Alzheimer's Biological Marker
Alzheimer's Blood Test
Alzheimer's Cure Elusive
Alzheimer's Biomarker ID
Alzheimer's Defining Disease
Alzheimer's Disease Awareness
Alzheimer’s Disease Prevalence
Alzheimer's Drug Target
Alzheimer's Epidemic Briefing
Alzheimer's From Mother
Alzheimer's Home Tips
Alzheimer's Jumps in Brain
Alzheimer's Quilt
Apathy, Depression Effect
Alzheimer's Predictor
Alzheimer's to Quadruple
Attitude About Aging Impact
"Big Science" Initiative
BMI Alzheimer's Link
BP Drugs Lower Risk
Brain Changes
Brain Network Coordination
Brain Size Predicts Risk
Brain Traffic Jams
Brain Wiring Disruption
Candle Lighting for Victims
Cargiver Alzheimer Info
Cells Talking
Central Mystery Unraveled
Climb Every Mountain Memoria
CLock Genes in Brain
Cold Sore Dementia Link
Common Dementia Risk
Common Genetic Mutations
Congressional Testimony
Congressional Action Urged
Coping with Alzheimer's
Decade of Care
Decision-Making Capability
Decreasing Tangles
Deep Brain Stimulation
Defeat Brain Disorder
Delay in Alzheimer’s
Delirium Risk Roadmap
Dementia Death Risk
Dementia Discrimination
Dementia Easily Misdiagnosed
Dementia on Rise
Dementia Perceptions
Dementia Screening
Dementia, Weight Loss
Depression, Alzheimer's
Depression Alzheimer's Risk
Depression Risk
Depression Speeds Decline
Diagnostic Guidelines Updated
Drug Improves Brain
Drug Improves Brain Function
Drug Slows Damage
Drugs with Opposing Effects
Earlier Alzheimer Death
Earlier Dementia Identification
Early Alzheimer's Indication
Early Dementia Targeted
Early Diagnosis Favored
Early Signs of Alzheimer's
Early Onset
Early Sign Reversal
Education Lowers Risk
End-Stage Dementia
Exrercise Deters Alzheimer's
Facing up to Alzheimer's
Face Up to Alzheimer's
Falls Indicate Dementia
Family Detection Dementia
Fighting Dementia
Fish Oil Little Effect
Forms of Dementia
Free Video, Guidebook
Funding in Doubt
Gastric Bypass, Dementia
Genetic Role
Good Health Prevention
Grammer Public Service Spots
Group Home Advantages
Hard-to-Diagnose Elderly
Head Size Indicator
Heart Related Dementia Risk
Healthy Aging Link
Healthy Aging Stratigies
Historic Alzheimer's Patient
How Alzheimer's Spreads
Hypertensive Drug, Alzheimer's
Improved Diagnosis
Immune Intervention
Inherited Alzheimer's
Irregular Heart Beat Link
Knowing Alzheimer's Risk
Less Antipsychotic Use
Less Clutter Benefit
Lifespan with Dementia
Limit amyloid b
Lewy Body Dementia
Lowering Dementia Risk
Low Testosterone Link
Memory Loss Dysfunction
Memory Restoration
Mexican-American Study
Markers, Mental Function
Midlife Obesity Risk
Middle-Age Stress, Dementia
More Dementia Case
Mild Alzheimer's
MRI Dementia Detection
Muted Emotions
Nasal Spray Dementia Treatment
National Alzheimer's Plan
National Alzheimer's Strategy
National Memory Screening Day
Natural Weapon
Nantz Alzheimer Center
New Biomarker in Blood
New Blood Test Detection
New Dementia Mode
New Dementia Risk
New Detection, Treatment
New Drug Candidate
New Drug Slows Disease
New Drugs Offer Hope
New Drug Target
New Genes Alzheimer's Risk
New Gene Link
New Hope from Compounds
New Light Memory Loss
New Research Areas
New Target Drug
No Cholesterol Link
No Magic Dementia Pill
Nutrient Cocktail
Online Dementia Risk Test
Over 80 Dementia Symptoms
Pathological Course
Plasticity Delays Onset
Poor Health Perception Impact
Possible Breakthrough
Predicting Dementia
Predicting Dementia
Preventable Alzheimer's?
Preventing Mental Declline
Problems Llinked to Dementia
Progress Against Dementia
Progress made on Alzheimer’s
Promising Early Treatment
Promising Lab Research
Protein, Alzheimer's Link
Protein Targeted
Purpose in Life Protection
Quicker Medicare Coverage
Quilt to Remember 2007 Tour
Reason in Dementia
Reduce Antipsychotic Drugs
Reducing Amyloids
Reduce Troubling Symptoms
Research, Familiy Consent
Resistance to Dementia
Reversing Cognitive Decline
Refiniing Guidelines
Risk Gene Discovered
Scan Identifies Alazheimer's Risk
Scanning for Plaques
Severity Cause
Side Effect Unlikely
Single Brain Trauma Impact
Significant Dementia Risk
Sing Dementia Away
Sleep Apnea Link
Sleep Problem Indicator
Spatial Memory Problems
Strong Dementa Predictor
Study Partners' Role
Sundowning Explained
Tackling Delirium
Together for Care
Temmperature Drop Impact
Testing Ethnical Implications
The Shriver Report
Trends in Alzheimer's
UCLA Launches Care Program
Undetected Dementia Symptoms
Updating Criteria
Unraveling  Dementia Pathology
Use of Anti-Psychotic Drugs
Use of Feeding Tubes
Vaccine in Nasal Spray
View of Alzheimer's
Vitamin B, Alzheimer's
Walking Benefits
World Alzheimer's Day
World Health Crisis
Younger People Dementia
5-Minute Alzheimer's Test
13.2 M Allzheimer's Patients
2011 World Alzheimer's Report
Inherited Disease Differences

 

 

 

 

Home
Addiction
Arthritis, Bones
Alzheimer's Disease
Blood Pressure News
Cancer Developments
Chronic Pain, Disease
Cirrhosis Impact
Aspirin, Cancer Patients
Aspirin, Cancer Patients
diabetes_news
Dietary for Seniors
Elderly Oral Health
Middle-Age Weight Gain
Exercise News
Flu Season
Hearing
Heart & Stroke News
Kidney News, Information
Hormone Boost No Threat
Mental Health
Parkinson's News
Foot Ulcers Threat
Respiratory Health
Seniors' Vision
Smile Measures Beauty
Vitamins, Nutrients
Whooping Cough Vaccine

 

 

 

 
 

 

Google

 

 

Web

TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com

 

AddThis Feed Button   Now, keep up to date with daily feeds of newly posted stories about America's Seniors...click on the box to the left

Alcohol consumption after age 75 associated with lower risk of developing dementia

3202 German individuals (75+) attending general practitioners , who were free of dementia were studied at baseline, were followed up 1.5 years and 3 years later by means of structured clinical interviews including detailed assessment of current alcohol consumption and DSM-IV dementia diagnoses.

Overall, these results are similar to several previous studies in the very elderly and suggest that moderate drinking is associated with less dementia, even among individuals aged 75 years and older.

Associations between alcohol consumption (in grams of ethanol), type of alcohol (wine, beer, mixed alcohol beverages) and incident dementia were examined using Cox proportional hazard models, controlling for several confounders.

 

There was good ascertainment of the development of dementia, even among subjects who died during follow up. Of 3,202 subjects free of dementia at baseline, 217 subjects met criteria for dementia during follow up.

Subjects consuming alcohol had approximately 30% less overall dementia and 40% less Alzheimer dementia than did non-drinking subjects. No significant differences were seen according to the type of alcoholic beverage consumed. Forum Comments

Background: In the last 31 years (1980 – 2011) the association between moderate alcohol intake and cognitive function has been investigated in 71 studies comprising 153,856 men and women from various populations with various drinking patterns. Most studies showed an association between light to moderate alcohol consumption and better cognitive function and reduced risk of dementia, including vascular dementia and Alzheimer dementia.

Comments on the present study: This new study from Germany is well done and has some interesting features:

a large sample size of 3,202 men and women with a mean age of 80.2 years.

participants recruited from general practice (probably reducing selection bias)

a thorough baseline examination and almost complete follow up

a large number of non-drinkers and moderate drinkers

substantial incidence rates of dementia during the follow-up period of 3 years

ascertainment of dementia even among subjects who died during follow up.

As stated by Forum member Erik Skovenborg, "The association found between alcohol consumption and incident overall dementia [adjusted hazard ratio (HR) 0.71, 95% CI 0.53-0.96], respectively, incident Alzheimer dementia (adjusted HR 0.58, 95% CI 0.38-0.89) are in accordance with most other studies, including the large Rotterdam Study1 and The Cardiovascular Health Study.2 Since a randomized, controlled study of alcohol consumption and risk of dementia has not been done (and would not be feasible), the jury is still out concerning the importance of confounding. Persons who continue drinking alcohol throughout old age are the remainder population, as mentioned by the authors of this study, exhibiting a survivor phenomenon. Happy people with many friends have the most opportunities for social drinking, and in this study alcohol consumption was significantly associated with factors that are protective for the development of dementia: better education, not living alone, and absence of depression. However, even after controlling for these and several other factors, the risk for incident dementia was still significantly lower among light-to-moderate alcohol consumers. Even so it may still be a part of the explanation that old German men and women, who drank alcohol sensibly in old age, also have a healthier lifestyle in terms of physical, dietary, and mental perspectives."

Forum member Roger Corder adds: "From all I have read on this subject, I fully agree that it is very difficult to separate alcohol consumption from other healthy lifestyle factors in populations where moderate drinking is commonplace. In this respect, the study doesn't correct for a healthy diet, which is also likely very important, as a poor diet is associated with increased risk of dementia due to deficiencies such as low omega-3 fat intake, inadequate vitamin B12, etc. However, it is also known that improved vascular function in alcohol drinkers could account for some element of reduced dementia risk."

Forum member David Vazour comments: "Mechanistically speaking, I don't think that the antioxidant capacity of wine phenolics would be the only explanation for these findings. First of all, following absorption these compounds are readily bio-transformed, therefore decreasing their antioxidant potential. There is also the question of whether or not they are able to cross the blood brain barrier and act in situ. Knowing the concentration of antioxidant enzymes and molecules within brain tissue, it is almost impossible to provide protection through only an antioxidant mechanism. Anti-inflammatory and vascular? Maybe. Further, wines vary in their phenolic composition (due to type of grape, climate, soil variations, etc.). It would be interesting to re-analyze the results based on phenolic composition."

Other Forum reviewers thought this was a well-performed study, with a result supporting previous ones, but there were limitations to the study. It included ex-drinkers with never drinkers in the referent group; there was a rather short period of follow up; among subjects reporting "mixed" types of beverage intake (that had the greatest estimated effect), numbers of subjects according to the percentage of their total alcohol intake from wine (e.g., < 30%, = 30%) were not given; there was no evidence of a dose-response curve, probably due to small numbers; the small numbers also probably made it impossible to assess for differences in effect for Alzheimer dementia and for other dementias. A Forum member added: "My only complaint is that it is a bit surprising to still see in 2011 analyses of all stroke considered as one group. The authors do discuss the disparate relations of alcohol drinking to ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke, a fact that makes it imperative to consider them separately."

A German Forum member, Ulrich Keil, stated: "The Swiss physician and philosopher Paracelsus (1493-1541) wrote: "Alle Dinge sind Gift, und nichts ist ohne Gift. Allein die Dosis macht, dass ein Ding kein Gift ist." (An approximate English translation is "All things are poison, and nothing is without poison. However it is the dose that makes a thing not a poison.") The subjects in this study were in general very moderate drinkers.

An American reviewer, Harvey Finkel, added: "The badge of age is not a warning label of fragility. While, I believe, one should not start to drink just because one has attained seniority, neither must one stop! Elderly folks handle alcohol with more responsibility than do the young, and they may derive greater health benefits from moderate drinking. Age is not a reason for abstinence."

 

 

... ..
...
...

 

   



Home
Up
Aging News
Seniors Commentary
California Report
Caregiving_News.htm
Community/Workplace
Election 2012
'Smart Bombing' Diseases
Fitness,Health
Grandparents
HealthCare Policy
Hispanic Seniors
Medicare News
Prescription Drug News
Resources, Links
Rural Seniors
Resources, links to seniors agencies, groups
Safety & Security
Seniors' Entertainment
Seniors' Finances
Seniors Relationships
Social Security News
The Virtual Family
Travel News
Veterans Tribute
Privacy Statement
Join Our Mailing List
Aging Resources Store
TSN Video News
Rx for American Health
New Page 12

 

 

Copyright 2000-2013 TodaysSeniorsNetwork

 

Contact Us