How Does Alcohol Affect Your Brain?

Cerebellum and its Role in Your Coordination

Alcohol-Cerebellum Created with Sketch. 🧠 🍺 🥃 🍸 🍷

Alcohol and the Brain

Binge drinking (drinking 5 units over a 2 hour period, followed by a period of abstinence) and high alcohol intake (more than 5 units a day), can lead to dependence, tolerance and cravings, which lead to a continuation of alcohol abuse to prevent withdrawal symptoms.

Chronic alcohol abuse can have adverse effects such as loss of balance and gait, slurred speech, slower reactions, poor memory consolidation, compromised emotional modulation and judgement. These effects in turn can lead to difficulties in social and emotional interactions, and a reduction in motivation, attention and impulse control.

These effects are studied and proven using methods such as MRI scans which show loss of neurons, particularly in the frontal lobe, the area most associated with reasoning, decision-making and rationality, however it can affect other areas of the brain such as the cerebellum (associated with balance and movement), hippocampus (memory) and amygdala (memory, decision making and emotional responses). [1]

Every year millions of people suffer from Alcohol use disorder, leading to physical and mental health problems.

Prevalence of alcohol abuse and direct death caused by alcohol dependance across the world [2]

What is Cerebellum and what does it do?

Cerebellum is one of the major controlling areas in terms of motor function: that means moving our bodies and keeping our balance ...

How does Alcohol damage your Cerebellum?

Loss of balance, dizziness, ...

How does damage to Cerebellum affect you?

Loss of balance, dizziness, ...

How to assess your Cerebellum function?

Loss of balance, dizziness, ...

Treatment and Rehabilitation

Loss of balance, dizziness, ...

References

  1. Alcoholic brain damage. (2013). In Crichton, R., & Ward, R. (2013). Metal-based neurodegeneration: from molecular mechanisms to therapeutic strategies. John Wiley & Sons. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118553480.ch12
  2. Global Burden of Disease Collaborative Network. Global Burden of Disease Study 2019 (GBD 2019) Results. Seattle, United States: Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME), 2020. Available from http://ghdx.healthdata.org/gbd-results-tool