研究显示吸烟会缩小大脑,戒烟不会恢复大脑大小
Smoking Shrinks The Brain, And Quitting Doesn’t Restore Size: Study

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/smoking-shrinks-brain-and-quitting-doesnt-restore-size-study

最近的科学研究强调,吸烟会缩小人类大脑的整体尺寸,而戒烟并不能完全恢复其原始形状,从而带来与年龄相关的认知能力下降和阿尔茨海默病的风险。 根据发表在《生物精神病学:全球开放科学》上的研究,每天吸烟的人脑容量会减少,而吸烟量较大的人更有可能出现显着下降。 与之前认为吸烟会对人的智力产生负面影响的知识不同,科学家们证明,吸烟者每吸一口烟,脑组织都会遭受不可逆转的损失,主要影响关键区域的灰质,对支持记忆、情绪调节的复杂神经回路网络造成严重伤害。和决策能力。 由于皮层下大脑结构受损,大量饮酒还与大脑体积减少超过正常衰老水平有关。 这些情况通常会导致长期的、有时甚至是致命的后果,因为一旦脑部受损,恢复可能变得难以捉摸。 更糟糕的是,有些人具有先天的生物倾向,这增加了他们养成吸烟习惯的可能性。 这些人占全球近五分之一,他们因与尼古丁成瘾相关的大脑退化而罹患慢性退行性疾病的几率更高,从而对全球死亡率模式做出了重大贡献。

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原文

Authored by Amie Dahnke via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Smoking cigarettes shrinks the size of the brain, and stopping doesn’t reverse the damage, a new study shows. The findings help explain why smokers have a higher risk of developing age-related cognitive decline and Alzheimer’s disease.

(Magic mine/Shutterstock)

But there is good news: As soon as someone stops smoking, the shrinking stops.

The study, published in Biological Psychiatry: Global Open Science, looked at data from 32,094 individuals of European descent who smoked daily. The data came from the UK Biobank, a biomedical database available to the public that contains genetic, health, and behavioral information on approximately 500,000 people.

The research team from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis found that total brain volume, including gray and white matter, decreased when a person smoked daily. Gray brain matter decreased more than white brain matter did, according to the analysis. Gray matter houses neural cell bodies, axon terminals, and dendrites; much of it is found in the cerebellum, cerebrum, and brain stem. It is responsible for the central nervous system, which enables a person to control movement, memory, and emotions. White matter is filled with bundles of axons coated with myelin. Its job is to send signals up and down the spinal cord when the brain receives a stimulus.

The analysis of the UK Biobank data showed that the more a person smoked, the more brain mass they lost. The realization that smoking affects the brain isn’t entirely new information, the research team admitted. “The adverse effect of smoking extends into the brain, and this is shown by the association between smoking and dementia,” they wrote.

The research team noted that areas like the hippocampal area, which is affected by Alzheimer’s disease, are particularly impacted by daily smoking. “This finding is consistent with smoking, which has been identified as a risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease, accelerating the development of this illness,” the research team wrote. In fact, the researchers suggested that 14 percent of Alzheimer’s cases across the world could be attributed to smoking.

In addition to smoking, the team found that drinking alcohol also has adverse effects on the brain. Like smoking, heavy alcohol use can reduce brain size, specifically subcortical brain volume. The subcortex is involved in overseeing emotions, memory, and hormone production. Subcortical structures also help people maintain their posture, gait, and other movements.

The risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease or dementia occurs even after someone stops smoking or drinking alcohol, researchers noted, because the brain damage is permanent.

Scientists believe Alzheimer’s disease is caused when proteins build up in and around brain cells, sort of like plaque on teeth. One of these proteins is called amyloid, and another is called tau. Tau tangles can interfere with the way the brain receives signals. Researchers admit they’re uncertain about the mechanisms that kickstart this process but know it can take years. Over time, however, the brain begins to shrink, which can lead to Alzheimer’s.

The Washington University team noted that some people have a genetic predisposition that leads them to smoke. In other words, part of the population is born with an increased risk of picking up the habit. As such, these people have a higher risk of reduced brain volume and of developing dementia or Alzheimer’s disease.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), in 2020, 22.3 percent of the world population used tobacco. Tobacco use kills over 8 million each year, including 1.3 million nonsmokers exposed to secondhand smoke.

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