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(Xinhua Photo)
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WASHINGTON,
May 22 (Xinhua) -- In people with mild cognitive impairment, up to one drink of
alcohol a day may slow their progression to dementia, according to an Italian
study published in the May 22 issue of Neurology, the scientific journal of the
American Academy of Neurology.
Mild cognitive impairment is a transitional stage
between normal aging and dementia that is used to classify people with mild
memory or cognitive problems and no significant disability.
Researchers evaluated alcohol consumption and the
incidence of mild cognitive impairment in 1,445 people. They then followed 121
people with mild cognitive impairment and their progression to dementia. The
participants, age 65 to 84, were part of the Italian Longitudinal Study on Aging
and were followed for three-and-a-half years.
The study found people with mild cognitive impairment
who had up to one drink of alcohol a day, mostly wine, developed dementia at an
85 percent slower rate than people with mild cognitive impairment who never
drank alcohol.
"While many studies have assessed alcohol consumption
and cognitive function in the elderly, this is the first study to look at how
alcohol consumption affects the rate of progression of mild cognitive impairment
to dementia," said study authors Vincenzo Solfrizzi and Francesco Panza at the
University of Bari, in Italy.
"The mechanism responsible for why low alcohol
consumption appears to protect against the progression to dementia isn't known.
However, it is possible that the arrangement of blood vessels in the brain may
play a role in why alcohol consumption appears to protect against dementia. This
would support other observations that drinking moderate amounts of alcohol may
protect the brain from stroke and vascular dementia," said the researchers.
The study did not find any association between higher
levels of drinking, more than one drink per day, and the rate of progression to
dementia in people with mild cognitive impairment compared to
non-drinkers.