Does Alcohol Kill Brain Cells
Drinking causes shrinkage in the hippocampus, which is the area of your brain that’s associated with memory and reasoning. The amount of shrinkage appears to be directly related to how much a person drinks.
Binge drinking and your body
Drinking alcohol is common in the U.S. About 84% of adults report drinking alcohol at some point in their lives, with 51% reporting drinking in the last month. Some people drink to feel sociable, celebrate a special occasion or to complement a meal. Others drink alcohol to escape from or avoid problems.
Moderate alcohol use for healthy adults generally means up to one drink a day for women and up to two drinks a day for men. Examples of one drink include:
- 12 fluid ounces of beer
- 5 fluid ounces of wine
- 1.5 fluid ounces of distilled spirits (80 proof)
Moderate alcohol use may have some benefits, but heavy or binge drinking has no health benefits. It’s defined as three drinks in a day or more than seven drinks a week for women and for men older than 65, and more than four drinks in a day or more than 14 drinks a week for men 65 and younger.
Here are answers to questions about the effects of heavy drinking on the body:
Q: Does drinking alcohol kill brain cells?
A: Alcohol is a neurotoxin that can disrupt communications of the brain. It also affects the functions of brain cells. This can lead to intellectual impairment, headaches, memory loss, slowed thinking, slurred speech, and trouble with balance and coordination. Excessive drinking can affect your nervous system, causing numbness and pain in your hands and feet, seizures and dementia.
Alcohol also is toxic to a developing brain during pregnancy and can cause congenital disabilities, including developmental disorders.
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Q: Can drinking alcohol improve mood?
A: Short-term, moderate use can help you feel relaxed and less inhibited, but alcohol is a depressant. Heavy drinking increases your risk for depression, anxiety, irritability and rapid mood changes. This can lead to relationship problems and impaired judgment. In severe cases, heavy alcohol consumption can cause a person to hallucinate, become paranoid and lose touch with reality.
Q: Is alcohol good for heart health?
A: Research has shown that drinking moderate amounts of alcohol can benefit your heart health. Studies have found that drinking alcohol in moderation increases your high-density lipoprotein (HDL), or “good” cholesterol, which helps carry away and break down extra cholesterol in the blood that could otherwise block your arteries. Alcohol thins your blood, too, making it less likely that your arteries will form a blood clot. Moderate alcohol intake can lower inflammation throughout your body.
However, drinking more than the recommended amount of alcohol can lead to heart problems. Too much alcohol may raise your blood pressure and triglyceride levels, putting you at higher risk for heart disease.
Q: Does binge drinking lead to liver disease?
A: Possibly. People who drink alcohol excessively have an increased risk of developing liver disease or liver failure, but not every person will develop these conditions.
The liver is essential for digesting foods and beverages. It breaks down alcohol and eliminates it from the body. Each person has a different alcohol metabolism, which is the ability to break down and eliminate alcohol. This metabolism is controlled by genetic factors, the amount of alcohol consumed and overall nutrition. Heavy drinking can cause increased fat and inflammation in the liver. Over time, this can cause irreversible damage and scarring of liver tissue, called cirrhosis. If left untreated, advanced cirrhosis can develop into liver failure, a life-threatening condition.
Q: Does alcohol protect against cancer?
A: No. Long-term, excessive alcohol use has been linked to a higher risk for many cancers, including mouth, throat, liver, esophagus, colon and breast cancers. Even moderate drinking can increase the risk of breast cancer.
Q: Does drinking alcohol increase the odds of catching a cold?
A: Yes. Alcohol can weaken your immune system. This can make it harder for your body to resist diseases and increase your risk for illnesses like colds, COVID-19 and pneumonia.
Q: My eye twitches when I drink. Is that normal?
A: Over time, heavy drinking can cause involuntary rapid eye movement or weakness and paralysis of your eye muscles. This is due to a vitamin B-1 deficiency, which causes other changes to your brain, like dementia, if not promptly treated. You should talk with your health care team about your symptoms.
If you’re experiencing problems with alcohol, speak with your primary care provider or a licensed counselor.
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Does Alcohol Kill Brain Cells?
We’ve all heard it, whether from parents, teachers, or after-school specials: alcohol kills brain cells. But is there any truth to this? Experts don’t think so.
While drinking can certainly make you act and feel as though you’ve lost a brain cell or two, there’s no evidence that this actually happens. But that doesn’t mean alcohol has no effect on your brain.
Here’s a look what actually happens to your brain when you drink.
Before getting into the effects of alcohol on the brain, it’s important to understand how experts talk about alcohol use.
Generally, drinking is classified as moderate, heavy, or binge:
- Moderate drinking is typically defined as 1 drink a day for females and 1 or 2 drinks a day for males.
- Heavy drinking is typically defined as more than 3 drinks on any day or more than 8 drinks a week for females. For males, it’s more than 4 drinks on any day or more than 15 drinks a week.
- Binge drinking is typically defined as 4 drinks within 2 hours for females and 5 drinks within 2 hours for males.
What’s in a drink?
Since not everyone’s idea of a drink is the same, experts refer to a drink as the equivalent of:
- 1.5 ounces of 80-proof spirits, roughly a shot
- 12 ounces of beer, the equivalent of a standard can
- 8 ounces of malt liquor, about three quarters of a pint glass
- 5 ounces of wine, roughly a half glass
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Alcohol is a neurotoxin that can affect your brain cells directly and indirectly. It enters your bloodstream immediately and reaches your brain within five minutes of drinking it. And it typically takes only 10 minutes to start feeling some of the effects.
It’s first big effect is triggering the release of endorphins. These feel-good hormones are the reason light-to-moderate drinkers feel more relaxed, sociable, and happy when drinking.
Heavy or binge drinking, on the other hand, can also interfere with your brain’s communication pathways and affect how your brain processes information.
In the short-term, you can expect:
- changes in your mood and behavior
- difficulty concentrating
- poor coordination
- slurred speech
- confusion
Alcohol poisoning
Alcohol poisoning can happen when you drink a lot of alcohol in a short period. This can cause the alcohol in your bloodstream to interfere with parts of your brain that are responsible for basic life support functions, such as:
- breathing
- body temperature
- heart rate
Left untreated, alcohol poisoning can cause permanent brain damage and death.
Drinking can have long-term effects on your brain, including decreased cognitive function and memory issues.
Brain atrophy
Researchers have long known that brain atrophy — or shrinkage — is common among heavy drinkers. But a 2017 study found that even moderate drinking can have similar effects.
Drinking causes shrinkage in the hippocampus, which is the area of your brain that’s associated with memory and reasoning. The amount of shrinkage appears to be directly related to how much a person drinks.
Results of the study showed that people who drank the equivalent of four drinks a day had almost six times the shrinkage as nondrinkers. Moderate drinkers had three times the risk of shrinkage than nondrinkers.
Neurogenesis issues
Even though alcohol doesn’t kill brain cells, it can negatively impact them long-term. For starters, too much alcohol can interfere with neurogenesis, which is your body’s ability to make new brain cells.
Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome
Heavy drinking can also lead to a thiamine deficiency, which can cause a neurological disorder called Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome. The syndrome — not the alcohol — results in a loss of neurons in the brain, causing confusion, memory loss, and loss of muscle coordination.
Is the damage reversible?
While the long-term effects of alcohol on the brain can be quite serious, most of them of the damage is reversible is you stop drinking. Even brain atrophy can start to reverse after a few weeks of avoiding alcohol.