Repeated alcohol exposure during adolescence will result in long-lasting changes in the region of the brain that controls learning and memory, according to a research team at Duke Medicine that used a rodent model as a surrogate for humans.
The study was published on April 27 in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research, provides new insights at the cellular level for how alcohol exposure during adolescence, before the brain is fully developed, can result in cellular and synaptic abnormalities that have enduring, detrimental effects on behavior.
"In the eyes of the law, once people reach the age of 18, they are considered adult, but the brain continues to mature and refine all the way into the mid-20s," said lead author Mary-Louise Risher, Ph.D., a post-doctoral researcher in the Duke Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. "It's important for young people to know that when they drink heavily during this period of development, there could be changes occurring that have a lasting impact on memory and other cognitive functions."
Read more detail here
Monday, 27 April 2015
Sunday, 26 April 2015
Foetal alcohol syndrome child refused Supreme Court compensation bid
A seven year old girl born with foetal alcohol
syndrome has been refused permission to take her case for criminal
injuries compensation to the UK Supreme Court.
The Court of Appeal ruled in December that the girl, now in care, was not legally entitled to compensation.
Permission to appeal was refused because an arguable point of law was not raised, the Supreme Court said.
An application was made to the Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority on her behalf on the basis that the girl was the victim of crime because her mother had administered a noxious substance to her.
The case was originally brought by a council in north-west England, which cannot be named for legal reasons. The Court of Appeal rejected a decision of the First Tier Tribunal awarding her compensation.
Foetal alcohol syndrome
Heavy drinking during pregnancy can lead to foetal alcohol syndrome (FAS). This is because alcohol passes across the placenta from the mother to the developing foetus and foetus cannot process alcohol effectively as the liver is not fully developed. High levels of alcohol can affect the development of organs and the brain.
It is thought that foetuses are most at risk during the first three months of pregnancy when organs are forming - but damage can occur at any time.
Children with FAS are born with a range of disabilities, are often shorter than average and some have learning and behavioural difficulties. Often there are differences in their facial features such as a flat nose bridge, a small head and a thin upper lip.
The NHS recommend
that pregnant women should not drink at all - adding that those who
choose to have a drink should have no more than two units of alcohol
once or twice a week.
Sunday, 19 April 2015
Slow approach to alcohol labelling ‘unacceptable’
The EU’s delay on introducing calorie and nutritional information on
alcoholic beverages has been branded “unacceptable” by a European
Parliament committee member.
Marc Tarabella, member of parliament’s agricultural and rural development committee, criticised the EU’s slow approach and submitted a question to the commission regarding the matter.
“Europeans are the world’s heaviest drinkers, yet no one knows the amount of calories, the composition or the energy value of what they drink,” Tarabella wrote on The Parliament Magazine.
In 2011, alcoholic beverages were taken out of legislation regarding food labelling to “explore different ways” of communicating the nutritional information of alcoholic products.
However, four years later a solution has not yet been resolved despite expectations of a legislative position to be delivered last year.
“Europe is slow to introduce new regulations – this is unacceptable,” Tarabella said.
“We want drinks to be labelled with a list of ingredients and their energy value. It should be possible, for example, to see how many calories are in a glass or in 100ml.”
He continued to explain that a recent study suggested when calorie information is displayed on bottles and drinks menus customers consumed approximately 400 fewer calories than they would have otherwise.
Furthermore, he highlighted that obesity affects 14 million Europeans and alcohol contributes up to 10% of frequent drinkers’ daily calorie intake.
“This is a question of fighting for consumer protection and safeguarding people’s health,” Tarabella added.
“We should not deprive ourselves of legislation that could help combat obesity or alcoholism.
“I hope the industry will fully cooperate in the development of new legislation. Parliament wants the process to be as transparent as possible and consumers have a right to know.”
Last month, Diageo became the first multi-national drinks firm to voluntarily pledge to print alcohol content and nutrition information per serve on its bottles.
Source: www.thespiritsbusiness.com
Marc Tarabella, member of parliament’s agricultural and rural development committee, criticised the EU’s slow approach and submitted a question to the commission regarding the matter.
“Europeans are the world’s heaviest drinkers, yet no one knows the amount of calories, the composition or the energy value of what they drink,” Tarabella wrote on The Parliament Magazine.
In 2011, alcoholic beverages were taken out of legislation regarding food labelling to “explore different ways” of communicating the nutritional information of alcoholic products.
However, four years later a solution has not yet been resolved despite expectations of a legislative position to be delivered last year.
“Europe is slow to introduce new regulations – this is unacceptable,” Tarabella said.
“We want drinks to be labelled with a list of ingredients and their energy value. It should be possible, for example, to see how many calories are in a glass or in 100ml.”
He continued to explain that a recent study suggested when calorie information is displayed on bottles and drinks menus customers consumed approximately 400 fewer calories than they would have otherwise.
Furthermore, he highlighted that obesity affects 14 million Europeans and alcohol contributes up to 10% of frequent drinkers’ daily calorie intake.
“This is a question of fighting for consumer protection and safeguarding people’s health,” Tarabella added.
“We should not deprive ourselves of legislation that could help combat obesity or alcoholism.
“I hope the industry will fully cooperate in the development of new legislation. Parliament wants the process to be as transparent as possible and consumers have a right to know.”
Last month, Diageo became the first multi-national drinks firm to voluntarily pledge to print alcohol content and nutrition information per serve on its bottles.
Source: www.thespiritsbusiness.com
Saturday, 18 April 2015
Discounted wine to cause surge in liver disease among women
A leading liver expert Dr Orla Crosbie has called for a ban on supermarket meal deals
that include heavily discounted wine, as medics prepare for a surge in
the number of women suffering alcohol- related diseases.
‘dine in for two’ deals offered by major supermarket chains for as little as €14, bottle of wine included, are helping fuel a culture of regular weekday drinking that is leading to an epidemic of liver disease in women.
Dr Orla Crosbie also wants alcohol to be sold separately from groceries in supermarkets in the hope that having to queue for a checkout a second time would deter women from impulse buying.
And she says girls as young as 13 and 14 should be provided with specific alcohol-related education at the time they receive their HPV cervical cancer vaccine in secondary school.
Her calls come in advance of a conference that will hear of growing concerns among health professionals and other campaigners about the increasing toll alcohol is taking on Irish women.
“The bottom line is that more females are drinking than they used to, and they’re drinking more,” Dr Crosbie said. “In Ireland 77% of females drink compared to an average of 68% in other European countries.”
“The other important thing is the increase in the binge drinking culture. Particularly when you look at 18 to 29-year-olds, as many females binge-drink as males which is a complete change in drinking patterns.
Dr Crosbie, a consultant gastroenterologist at Cork University Hospital, said that when she started work with liver cases 20 years ago, it was rare to see a female patient. Now 36% of her patients with alcohol-related cirrhosis (advanced liver damage) are women.
“I did a clinic yesterday with 15 patients, men and women, with general liver problems — not all alcohol-related — but four of those 15 were women, three in their 40s and one in her 50s, with established significant liver disease caused by alcohol. That just didn’t happen 15-20 years ago.
“My concern going into the future would be that we’re going to see more females with alcoholic liver disease than males.”
Her concern mirrors that of other doctors who appeared before the Oireachtas Health Committee in recent weeks to discuss planned new laws for restricting the sale and marketing of alcohol. They said deaths from cirrhosis had doubled in 20 years but the biggest increase was among women.
Women are physically less able to process alcohol than men and their guideline maximum weekly alcohol intake is two-thirds that of men — 14 units compared to 21 — but doctors fear this is being ignored.
The risks of regular excess drinking for women include not just potentially fatal cirrhosis, but an increased likelihood of jaundice, liver tumours, internal bleeding, impaired memory, neurological problems, infertility, miscarriage, foetal alcohol syndrome, and a higher chance of breast cancer.
While alcohol consumption has declined overall in recent years, women buck the trend and there was a 7% increase in wine sales last year which is seen to reflect a mainly female market.
Suzanne Costello of the charity Alcohol Action Ireland, which hosts next Tuesday’s international conference, ‘Girls, Women and Alcohol’ said: “Alcohol is not an equal opportunities product. The impact on women is very different and it needs to be addressed.”
Health Minister Leo Varadkar is before the health committee next Thursday to give a progress report on the new laws which face a race against the clock to be passed before the general election.
Source: www.irishexaminer.com
Image Source www.letstalkwine.com
‘dine in for two’ deals offered by major supermarket chains for as little as €14, bottle of wine included, are helping fuel a culture of regular weekday drinking that is leading to an epidemic of liver disease in women.
Dr Orla Crosbie also wants alcohol to be sold separately from groceries in supermarkets in the hope that having to queue for a checkout a second time would deter women from impulse buying.
And she says girls as young as 13 and 14 should be provided with specific alcohol-related education at the time they receive their HPV cervical cancer vaccine in secondary school.
Her calls come in advance of a conference that will hear of growing concerns among health professionals and other campaigners about the increasing toll alcohol is taking on Irish women.
“The bottom line is that more females are drinking than they used to, and they’re drinking more,” Dr Crosbie said. “In Ireland 77% of females drink compared to an average of 68% in other European countries.”
“The other important thing is the increase in the binge drinking culture. Particularly when you look at 18 to 29-year-olds, as many females binge-drink as males which is a complete change in drinking patterns.
Dr Crosbie, a consultant gastroenterologist at Cork University Hospital, said that when she started work with liver cases 20 years ago, it was rare to see a female patient. Now 36% of her patients with alcohol-related cirrhosis (advanced liver damage) are women.
“I did a clinic yesterday with 15 patients, men and women, with general liver problems — not all alcohol-related — but four of those 15 were women, three in their 40s and one in her 50s, with established significant liver disease caused by alcohol. That just didn’t happen 15-20 years ago.
“My concern going into the future would be that we’re going to see more females with alcoholic liver disease than males.”
Her concern mirrors that of other doctors who appeared before the Oireachtas Health Committee in recent weeks to discuss planned new laws for restricting the sale and marketing of alcohol. They said deaths from cirrhosis had doubled in 20 years but the biggest increase was among women.
Women are physically less able to process alcohol than men and their guideline maximum weekly alcohol intake is two-thirds that of men — 14 units compared to 21 — but doctors fear this is being ignored.
The risks of regular excess drinking for women include not just potentially fatal cirrhosis, but an increased likelihood of jaundice, liver tumours, internal bleeding, impaired memory, neurological problems, infertility, miscarriage, foetal alcohol syndrome, and a higher chance of breast cancer.
While alcohol consumption has declined overall in recent years, women buck the trend and there was a 7% increase in wine sales last year which is seen to reflect a mainly female market.
Suzanne Costello of the charity Alcohol Action Ireland, which hosts next Tuesday’s international conference, ‘Girls, Women and Alcohol’ said: “Alcohol is not an equal opportunities product. The impact on women is very different and it needs to be addressed.”
Health Minister Leo Varadkar is before the health committee next Thursday to give a progress report on the new laws which face a race against the clock to be passed before the general election.
Source: www.irishexaminer.com
Image Source www.letstalkwine.com
Wednesday, 8 April 2015
Man Arrested For Refusing Sobriety Test Gets $70,000
Falling asleep at the wheel could be very dangerous, for
both the driver and any unfortunate passengers or pedestrians nearby;
the degradation of one’s mental state could be comparable to the
effects of alcohol, and being tired could even cause you to fail a field
sobriety test, should you agree to take it. (USA)
Used by police officers to enforce DUI laws, roadside sobriety tests are oftern used before Breathalyzer tests. These tests judge your balance, physical ability and attention level. Some police officers have demanded such strange “performances” as reciting the alphabet… backwards. Try doing that anyway!. I suspect the cops get a kick out of it, regardless of your mental state.
Knowing your rights can really help you avoid becoming “entertainment”. One man who knew his rights refused to take part in a field sobriety test or any of the officer’s further demands, as the officer began to claim that the man was required to follow his commands by law. This resulted in his unconstitutional arrest, based only on the fact that he had “blood-shot eyes”.
The man in the video has been awarded $70,000 two years on for the false arrest
When the man was taken to jail he was forced to take a blood test which proved he was just exhausted
Please note that commonsense dictates that you should just take a quick nap on the roadside if you are tired
Source
Used by police officers to enforce DUI laws, roadside sobriety tests are oftern used before Breathalyzer tests. These tests judge your balance, physical ability and attention level. Some police officers have demanded such strange “performances” as reciting the alphabet… backwards. Try doing that anyway!. I suspect the cops get a kick out of it, regardless of your mental state.
Knowing your rights can really help you avoid becoming “entertainment”. One man who knew his rights refused to take part in a field sobriety test or any of the officer’s further demands, as the officer began to claim that the man was required to follow his commands by law. This resulted in his unconstitutional arrest, based only on the fact that he had “blood-shot eyes”.
The man in the video has been awarded $70,000 two years on for the false arrest
When the man was taken to jail he was forced to take a blood test which proved he was just exhausted
Please note that commonsense dictates that you should just take a quick nap on the roadside if you are tired
Source
Thursday, 2 April 2015
Old Before My Time - Alcohol Documentary
Came across a copy of a documentary aired on BBC three that I hadnt seen, but it is very good so thought I would share incase others had missed it as well. Shows some of the really shocking effects that alcohol can have on your body that you wouldn't even think about.
We all know that drinking, drugs and fast food are bad for you, but these days a life of excess isn't just leaving young people hungover, it's accelerating their age - hit by chronic conditions usually the preserve of pensioners, their young bodies and minds are ready for retirement.
In the first programme, Cherry meets medical experts who are treating young recovering alcoholics like Jo, who has damaged her liver so much that her stomach is filled with 23 litres of fluid which must be drained every three weeks. She also meets 21-year-old Mat, who fell into an alcohol-induced coma and had to have a liver transplant.
We all know that drinking, drugs and fast food are bad for you, but these days a life of excess isn't just leaving young people hungover, it's accelerating their age - hit by chronic conditions usually the preserve of pensioners, their young bodies and minds are ready for retirement.
In the first programme, Cherry meets medical experts who are treating young recovering alcoholics like Jo, who has damaged her liver so much that her stomach is filled with 23 litres of fluid which must be drained every three weeks. She also meets 21-year-old Mat, who fell into an alcohol-induced coma and had to have a liver transplant.
Labels:
abuse,
alcohol,
alcohol abuse,
bbc,
bbc three,
bbc3,
documentary,
hospital,
liver,
old
Wednesday, 1 April 2015
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