Vitamin B1 deficiency linked to development of alcohol-related dementia
Alcohol‐related dementia (ARD) is a common and severe co‐morbidity in alcohol use disorder (AUD). However, we do not yet fully understand how alcohol leads to decline in cognitive function
Researchers at Stephan Listabarth from MedUni Vienna's Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Division of Social Psychiatry, have now developed a hypothesis whereby iron deposits in the brain -- resulting from alcohol-induced vitamin B1 deficiency -- can be regarded as key factors in cognitive decline. The work has now been published in the leading journal Alzheimer's and Dementia.
In Austria, around 5% of the population are alcohol dependent from the age of 15 onwards. This means that approximately 365,000 people are affected by the dangerous health consequences associated with high alcohol consumption. One of these consequences is a decline in cognitive function, especially memory and abstraction. This is then referred to as alcohol-related dementia. However, we do not yet fully understand the exact pathomechanism, that is to say the way in which the brain is damaged by alcohol.
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