Multimodal brain imaging study of 36,678 participants reveals adverse effects of moderate drinking

Author:

Daviet Remi,Aydogan Gökhan,Jagannathan Kanchana,Spilka Nathaniel,Koellinger Philipp D.,Kranzler Henry R.,Nave Gideon,Wetherill Reagan R.ORCID

Abstract

ABSTRACTHeavy alcohol consumption can have significant deleterious neural consequences, including brain atrophy, neuronal loss, poorer white matter fiber integrity, and cognitive decline. However, the effects of light-to-moderate alcohol consumption on brain structure remain unclear. Here, we examine the associations between alcohol intake and brain structure using multimodal imaging data from 36,678 generally healthy middle-aged and older adults from the UK Biobank, controlling for numerous potential confounds. We find negative associations between alcohol intake and global gray matter volume (GMV) and white matter volume (WMV), which become stronger as intake increases. An examination of the associations between alcohol intake and 139 regional GMV imaging-derived phenotypes (IDPs) and 375 WM microstructure IDPs yielded 304 (59.1%) significant findings, including 125 GMV IDPs that are spread across the brain and 179 WM microstructure IDPs across multiple tract regions. In general, findings comport with the existing literature. However, a daily alcohol intake of as little as one to two units – 250 to 500 ml of a 4% beer or 76 to 146 ml of a 13% wine – is already associated with GMV deficits and altered WMV microstructure, placing moderate drinkers at risk.One Sentence SummaryModerate alcohol intake, consuming one or more daily alcohol units, has adverse effects on brain health.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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