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It didn't make sense to me, but he never said how much he was actually drinking. If I buy a .7l bottle of slivovitz, it lasts me 2 weeks at least, usually. Is that sort of drinking actually harmful ?
Unfortunately, yes, small amounts of alcohol have a detectable effect on brain white and gray matter volume:
Here "one unit" means 10ml of ethanol, slivovitz has 50% abv, so you're drinking 350ml ethanol per 14 days = 2.5 alcohol units per day. The paper I linked has a bunch of interesting figures (fig 3 in particular is nice), and they provide this useful comparison:
Going from 0 to 1 daily units doesn't have any measurable effect in that study, but going from 1 to 2 and 2 to 3 does. So with your 2.5 units/day, it's equivalent to an aging-related decrease in brain volume of around 3.75 years. Not world-ending in any sense, but still not nothing.
(I'm slightly confused by the study, since presumably the effects should depend on how long you've been drinking alcohol, and not just provide a flat decrease in brain matter, but I'm not seeing any such effect reported in the paper)
I mean, alcohol accounting for 0.4% of variance doesn't seem very important.
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My first thought is that this implies reverse causality. If a snapshot shows the result without expect to duration, a parsimonious explanation would be that people with diminished brain matter tend to drink more rather than that drinking causes diminished brain matter. Feedback loops would be unsurprising as well.
Yeah that's what I thought too, but they super-duper promise they accounted for confounders:
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I probably have ten to fifteen bottles of scotch. If I don’t replace them, that will probably last me two years. Every once in a while, I’ll pour a drink (never more) if I’m in the mood. Or I’ll pour a drink or two if a friend comes over. I enjoy scotch but don’t understand the idea of binge drinking it.
I think some people enjoy the feeling of being tipsy (I know I do). However once you reach that stage your inhibitions are lowered and it's much harder to stop at the pleasant tipsy stage.
Also your body adapts to drinking by changing what BAC is tipsy and how much alcohol is required to reach that BAC as one drinks more.
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