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Heavy drinking when young can trigger ‘serious health problems’ in later life, doctors warn

By Editor
15 November 2016   |   2:45 am
Drinking too much as a young adult may put you at risk for ‘serious health problems’ decades down the line, even long after the problem has been controlled, a new study warns.
PHOTO CREDIT: google.com/search

PHOTO CREDIT: google.com/search

Drinking too much as a young adult may put you at risk for ‘serious health problems’ decades down the line, even long after the problem has been controlled, a new study warns.

Examining more than 600 male veterans in the United States (U.S.), researchers found that those who reported symptoms of alcohol dependence in their younger years suffered more medical conditions than non-drinkers, and scored twice as high on the depression scale.

The researchers say drinking heavily as a young adult may have ‘hidden consequences’ for both physical and mental health by the time a person reaches their 60s, despite the improvements that occur when drinking is curbed by the age of 30.

In the study, the researchers found that chronic alcohol use was tied to a higher number of late-life medical conditions, poorer physical health, poorer mental health, and double the rate of depression.

Along with this, those with alcohol dependence had lower social support, lower resilience, almost double the disability rate, and almost twice the mortality risk.

These effects were also seen in those who experienced midlife remission, with the only exception being a decrease in mortality rates.

In a study published to the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, researchers investigated the effects of drinking among 664 U.S. male Vietnam-era veterans. Of this group, 368 did not report any symptoms of alcohol dependence at any point in their adulthood, while 221 had at least three symptoms of dependence in young adulthood, and 75 had symptoms only before the age of 30.

The researchers found that participants who had reported alcohol dependence symptoms for at least five years during their early adulthood were in poorer physical and mental health in their 60s.

Compared with an average of two medical conditions reported by non-drinkers in the study, those who had experienced alcohol dependence as young adults had an average of three. And on the depression scale, these participants scored twice as high.

These findings were present even in those who had curbed their drinking problem by the age of 30, the researchers found, suggesting there are ‘silent but permanent’ injuries that result from the condition.

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