Jul 14 2009

A Drink a Day Keeps the Dementia Away

Published by Florida Senior Living Advisor at 12:27 pm under Senior Living Issues

Our regular Sunday night dinners with my elderly father and his friend Ginny always include a drink with our meal. Usually it is red wine, although sometimes, particularly if we go out to eat, they opt for a vodka martini (with an olive AND a twist please). At ages 84 and 90, respectively, I figure they can do what they want. And after all, we provide the ride to and from their Florida continuing care retirement community, so no worries there.

But it never occurred to me that those drinks might actually be helping them. That’s right. According to a new study one or two alcoholic beverages a day may reduce a senior citizen’s risk of developing dementia by almost 40 percent. The study was presented this week at the International Conference on Alzheimer’s Disease, currently being held in Vienna, Austria.

These “moderate drinkers” who are 75 years of age or older had a lower risk of developing dementia than people who had more than two drinks a day and also a lower risk than those individuals who abstained from any alcohol completely, Dr. Kaycee Sink and her colleagues found. For the study, they asked more than 3,000 adults how often they drank and examined them every six months for up to six years for signs of memory loss or mental decline.

The findings aren’t a free pass for drinking among the elderly, the results showed. People who were already showing signs of memory problems deteriorated significantly faster if they drank alcohol, and the more they consumed the worse the symptoms became. Heavy drinkers, defined as those consuming more than 14 drinks a week, were almost twice as likely to develop dementia, researchers said.

“If you’re already drinking, you don’t need to cut back if you’re cognitively healthy, but we don’t have enough information to recommend you start drinking,” Kaycee Sink, assistant professor of medicine at Wake Forest University School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, said during a press conference. “The benefits increase as people move from mild to moderate levels of drinking, and then start to decline.”

Maybe this study will convince the folks in charge of senior living facilities to add a regular happy hour to their activity calendars!

I suppose these results also have implications for me and my fellow 40-something friends. We’ve known for a long time that a glass or two of red wine is good for our hearts. Now to think it can also stave off dementia is reason to celebrate – with a toast!

One response so far

One Response to “A Drink a Day Keeps the Dementia Away”

  1. bethon 16 Jul 2009 at 12:54 am

    Nice blog with a very nice title “A Drink a Day Keeps the Dementia Away” Being a wine lover, I enjoyed going through your blog. Keep it up the good work.

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