酒精使用障碍与痴呆症:综述。

Q1 Psychology
Alcohol research : current reviews Pub Date : 2024-05-23 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.35946/arcr.v44.1.03
Natalie M Zahr
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:到 2040 年,21.6% 的美国人将超过 65 岁,85 岁以上的老年人口估计将达到 1440 万。虽然不是致病因素,但年龄增长是痴呆症的一个风险因素:65 岁以后每增长 5 岁,患痴呆症的风险就会增加一倍;85 岁以上的老年人中约有三分之一被诊断出患有痴呆症。由于目前老年人的饮酒量明显高于前几代人,一个迫切的问题是饮酒是否会增加阿尔茨海默病或其他形式痴呆症的风险:搜索的数据库包括 PubMed、Web of Science 和 ScienceDirect。为了完成这篇关于饮酒对痴呆症风险影响的叙述性综述,所涉及的文献包括临床诊断、流行病学、神经心理学、死后病理学、神经影像学和其他生物标志物以及转化研究。在 2023 年 1 月 12 日至 8 月 1 日期间进行的搜索包括以下术语和组合:衰老"、"酗酒"、"酒精使用障碍 (AUD)"、"大脑"、"中枢神经系统"、"痴呆"、"Wernicke"、"Korsakoff"、"阿尔茨海默氏症"、"血管性"、"额颞叶"、"路易体"、"临床"、"诊断"、"流行病学"、"病理学"、"尸检"、"死后"、"组织学"、"认知"、"运动"、"神经心理"、"磁共振"、"成像"、"PET"、"配体"、"变性"、"萎缩"、"转化"、"啮齿动物"、"大鼠"、"小鼠"、"模型"、"淀粉样蛋白"、"神经纤维缠结"、"α-突触核蛋白 "或 "早老素"。"相关时,"物种"(即 "人类 "或 "其他动物")被选为附加过滤器。尽可能避免使用评论性文章:使用 "酗酒 "和 "衰老 "这两个词检索到约 1,350 篇论文;添加短语--例如 "死后 "或 "磁共振"--将论文数量限制在 100 篇以内。使用传统术语 "酗酒 "和 "痴呆症 "可获得 876 条引用信息,但使用目前公认的术语 "酒精使用障碍 (AUD) "和 "痴呆症 "只能获得 87 篇论文。同样,使用 "阿尔茨海默氏症 "和 "酗酒 "会产生 318 条引文,而使用 "阿尔茨海默氏症 "和 "酒精使用障碍 (AUD)" 则只有 40 条引文。由于相关的死后病理学论文发表于 20 世纪 50 年代,而最近的阿尔茨海默病动物模型则是在 21 世纪初建立的,因此所引用的文章时间跨度为 1957 年至 2024 年。共考虑了 5,000 多篇文章,其中约 400 篇被引用:长期滥用酒精会加速大脑衰老,导致认知障碍,包括记忆力障碍。然而,来自多个学科的研究一致认为,酒精滥用会增加痴呆症的风险,但不一定会增加阿尔茨海默病的风险。需要考虑的关键问题包括:与阿尔茨海默病的退行性和进行性过程相比,戒除长期酗酒后大脑损伤的可逆性,以及阿尔茨海默病患者大脑中存在蛋白质包涵体的特征,而澳大拉德患者大脑中不存在这种包涵体。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Alcohol Use Disorder and Dementia: A Review.

Purpose: By 2040, 21.6% of Americans will be over age 65, and the population of those older than age 85 is estimated to reach 14.4 million. Although not causative, older age is a risk factor for dementia: every 5 years beyond age 65, the risk doubles; approximately one-third of those older than age 85 are diagnosed with dementia. As current alcohol consumption among older adults is significantly higher compared to previous generations, a pressing question is whether drinking alcohol increases the risk for Alzheimer's disease or other forms of dementia.

Search methods: Databases explored included PubMed, Web of Science, and ScienceDirect. To accomplish this narrative review on the effects of alcohol consumption on dementia risk, the literature covered included clinical diagnoses, epidemiology, neuropsychology, postmortem pathology, neuroimaging and other biomarkers, and translational studies. Searches conducted between January 12 and August 1, 2023, included the following terms and combinations: "aging," "alcoholism," "alcohol use disorder (AUD)," "brain," "CNS," "dementia," "Wernicke," "Korsakoff," "Alzheimer," "vascular," "frontotemporal," "Lewy body," "clinical," "diagnosis," "epidemiology," "pathology," "autopsy," "postmortem," "histology," "cognitive," "motor," "neuropsychological," "magnetic resonance," "imaging," "PET," "ligand," "degeneration," "atrophy," "translational," "rodent," "rat," "mouse," "model," "amyloid," "neurofibrillary tangles," "α-synuclein," or "presenilin." When relevant, "species" (i.e., "humans" or "other animals") was selected as an additional filter. Review articles were avoided when possible.

Search results: The two terms "alcoholism" and "aging" retrieved about 1,350 papers; adding phrases-for example, "postmortem" or "magnetic resonance"-limited the number to fewer than 100 papers. Using the traditional term, "alcoholism" with "dementia" resulted in 876 citations, but using the currently accepted term "alcohol use disorder (AUD)" with "dementia" produced only 87 papers. Similarly, whereas the terms "Alzheimer's" and "alcoholism" yielded 318 results, "Alzheimer's" and "alcohol use disorder (AUD)" returned only 40 citations. As pertinent postmortem pathology papers were published in the 1950s and recent animal models of Alzheimer's disease were created in the early 2000s, articles referenced span the years 1957 to 2024. In total, more than 5,000 articles were considered; about 400 are herein referenced.

Discussion and conclusions: Chronic alcohol misuse accelerates brain aging and contributes to cognitive impairments, including those in the mnemonic domain. The consensus among studies from multiple disciplines, however, is that alcohol misuse can increase the risk for dementia, but not necessarily Alzheimer's disease. Key issues to consider include the reversibility of brain damage following abstinence from chronic alcohol misuse compared to the degenerative and progressive course of Alzheimer's disease, and the characteristic presence of protein inclusions in the brains of people with Alzheimer's disease, which are absent in the brains of those with AUD.

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来源期刊
Alcohol research : current reviews
Alcohol research : current reviews Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
18.80
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