RELATED: This Common Medication Could Be Hurting Your Brain, New Study Says. Starting to abuse alcohol after age 40 might be the first sign of a neurological condition like dementia, researchers from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and the University of California, San Francisco found. The study, published in the April 4 edition of the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, was conducted to address lingering questions about late-onset alcohol abuse and whether it could signal neurodegenerative diseases patients already have. When looking at patients with different forms of dementia, investigators concluded that this kind of excessive drinking could actually be a “presenting symptom”—in other words, the reason a patient seeks out medical treatment—of dementia.ae0fcc31ae342fd3a1346ebb1f342fcb Researchers included participants with different forms of dementia, including behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia, Alzheimer’s-type dementia, and aphasia. According to the paper’s senior author, Georges Naasan, MD, associate professor of neurology and medical director for the Division of Behavioral Neurology and Neuropsychiatry at the Ichan School of Medicine, investigators identified and compared lifelong alcohol abuse (starting before the age of 40), late-onset alcohol abuse (starting at age 40 or above), as well as alcohol abuse as the first symptom of dementia (abuse that started within the first three years from symptom onset). “What we found is that alcohol abuse may be the first sign of an underlying neurological condition when it presents late in life,” Naasan said in a press release from Mount Sinai, pointing to frontotemporal dementia specifically. “In fact, up to seven percent (nearly one in 15) of patients with frontotemporal dementia started abusing alcohol late in life, and five percent (one in 20) did so as the first symptom of the disease.” Late-onset alcohol abuse was less frequent in people with Alzheimer’s disease. All in all, investigators found that just over two percent of patients with dementia were likely to start abusing alcohol after age 40.
RELATED: For more up-to-date information, sign up for our daily newsletter. People who need help for alcohol abuse later in life generally seek out a psychiatrist, their primary care provider, or a rehabilitation specialist—not a neurologist. This creates a dangerous problem, as patients could be misdiagnosed with primary alcohol abuse, the Mount Sinai press release states. When patients are referred to undergo a treatment program for addiction unnecessarily, they may wait even longer for a correct diagnosis. According to Naasan, to avoid this, healthcare providers need to be aware that different brain diseases could be the cause of this alcohol abuse, specifically for patients who don’t have a history of heavy drinking. “While it is important to identify social factors that may lead to alcohol abuse, such as retirement, loneliness, or loss of income/loved ones/housing, our data should implore health care workers to avoid systematically attributing alcohol abuse to these aspects and prompt clinicians to investigate the possibility of frontal lobe dysfunction,” Naasan said, adding that healthcare providers should check for frontal lobe symptoms and refer any at-risk patients to a neurologist. Before you swear off alcohol forever, be aware that indulging in a glass of wine with dinner or a beer with friends does not necessarily land you in the “late-onset alcohol abuse” category. According to the Mount Sinai press release, overall alcohol abuse is defined as “when alcohol consumption negatively impacts work or social life or leads to legal ramifications.” According to the Centers for Disease Control and Protection (CDC), excessive drinking can endanger your health both in the short-term, via injuries and alcohol poisoning, as well as in the long-term, with an increased risk of cancer, heart disease, and dementia. Binge drinking, the most common form of excessive drinking, is defined as consuming four or more drinks during a single occasion for women, and five for men, while heavy drinking is more than eight drinks for women per week, and 15 drinks for men. RELATED: Eating This Popular Food Can Lead to Dementia, Study Says.