Smoking
interferes with brain's recovery from alcoholism…
Brains of recovering alcoholics who smoke don’t recover physically
or cognitively as well as brains of those who don't smoke
Smoking appears to interfere with the brain's ability to
recover from the effects of chronic alcohol abuse, according to a
study conducted by researchers at the San Francisco VA Medical
Center.
After one month of sobriety, recovering alcoholics who smoked
showed significantly less improvement than those who did not smoke
in both brain function and neurochemical markers of brain cell
health.
"This study suggests that for better brain recovery, it may
be beneficial for alcoholics in early abstinence to stop smoking as
well," concludes Dieter Meyerhoff, Dr.rer.nat., a radiology
researcher at SFVAMC and the senior author of the study. Meyerhoff
is also a professor of radiology at the University of California,
San Francisco.
The study appears in the March 2006 issue of Alcoholism:
Clinical and Experimental Research.
At the outset of the study, the authors examined 25
recovering alcoholics – 14 smokers and 11 nonsmokers – using
spectroscopic imaging, a magnetic resonance imaging technique. The
subjects' brains were measured for two important metabolites: N-acetylaspartate
(NAA), a marker of neuronal viability, and choline, a marker of cell
membrane health.
After one month of abstinence from alcohol, the subjects'
brains were re-examined, and the brains of the nonsmokers showed
significant increases in NAA and choline.
"We did not see the same pattern or magnitude of recovery in
chronic smoking alcoholics who continued to smoke during this early
stage in recovery," reports lead author Timothy Durazzo, PhD, a
research scientist at SFVAMC. "In fact, in the smoking alcoholic
group, we saw a decrease in NAA and choline-containing metabolites
in parietal and occipital white matter." The parietal lobe plays an
important role in sensory processing and object manipulation. The
occipital lobe controls visual processing.
The study participants' visual-spatial learning and memory,
attention and concentration, and overall processing speed were also
evaluated at the beginning of the study and after one month. Among
the non-smokers, the greater the increases in NAA and choline in
certain brain regions, the greater the improvement in visual-spatial
learning and memory and attention and concentration.
"We observed no such short-term cognitive improvements among
the smoking recovering alcoholics," says Durazzo. "And the
relationships between metabolic brain recovery and neurocognition
were not as pronounced, and in many cases were absent, in the
smoking group."
The study authors caution that their results are preliminary
and need to be replicated in a prospective study of a larger,
entirely different population. If they are, says Meyerhoff, then
professionals who treat alcoholism may wish to consider adding
smoking cessation to their usual treatment plans.
"This may be a lot to ask from an alcoholic individual going
through drastic brain chemical imbalances in early recovery," he
acknowledges. "But it may lead to faster brain recovery."
Durazzo points out that while severe, such a strategy might
be effective because among alcoholics, "cigarettes and alcohol tend
to go together. One may elicit cravings for the other. So if you are
able to give up both at the same time, it may increase your chances
of staying sober, because you don't have one substance serving as a
trigger for use of the other."
Durazzo says the study also raises the question of whether
smokers respond differently than nonsmokers to current
pharmacological treatments for alcoholism: "Do these alterations in
brain chemistry have implications for pharmacological treatments of
both smoking and alcohol abuse? That remains to be seen."
For their next step, Meyerhoff, Durazzo, and their research
team plan to analyze their study participants' brain chemistry and
neurocognitive performance after six months of sobriety, which they
hope will give insight into differences in long-term recovery
between the two populations.
The researchers also plan to study an entirely different
group of smoking and nonsmoking recovering alcoholics. That study
will look at whether other health factors, including diet, exercise,
and general health, affect the brain's recovery from alcohol abuse.
###
Co-authors of the study are Stefan Gazdzinski, PhD, of SFVAMC,
and Johannes C. Rothlind, PhD, and Peter Banys, MD, of SFVAMC and
UCSF.
The research was funded by a grant from the National
Institutes of Health that was administered by the Northern
California Institute for Research and Education (NCIRE).
UCSF is a leading university that consistently defines health
care worldwide by conducting advanced biomedical research, educating
graduate students in the life sciences, and providing complex
patient care.
The mission of NCIRE is to improve the health and well-being
of veterans and the general public by supporting a world-class
biomedical research program conducted by the UCSF faculty at SFVAMC.