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New research has drawn additional links between the consumption of alcohol and brain damage associated with cognitive decline ...
One study discovered that heavy and former heavy drinking was associated with brain abnormalities like hyaline ...
From your brain and heart, to your lungs and muscles ... diet and other health factors can all influence the effects of alcohol on tumor formation. Nevertheless, rethinking your alcohol drinking ...
From your brain and heart, to your lungs and muscles ... resulting in abnormal pro­teins that promote inflammation that favors tumor formation. Alcohol can also directly affect hormone levels ...
According to the London Neurology Partnership, colloid cysts are small fluid-filled sacs located in or around the lateral and third ventricles of the brain. The presenter’s celebrity colleagues ...
Drinking eight or more alcoholic beverages each week could have a damaging effect on the brain, according to a new study published in Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of ...
Infuriating as it is when someone suggests a woman is feeling weepy ‘just’ because she’s about to have her period, for some of us, sometimes, there’s truth to it. Years of research have ...
Anyone who’s ever noticed that they feel more relaxed or outgoing after having a drink or two has seen firsthand alcohol’s impact on the brain. But as you may have guessed, beyond the feel-good vibes, ...
That volume of alcohol was linked to a higher risk of developing a type of brain lesion called hyaline arteriolosclerosis, which causes a narrowing and thickening of blood vessels and impedes the ...
Anyone who’s ever noticed that they feel more relaxed or outgoing after having a drink or two has seen firsthand alcohol’s impact on the brain. But as you may have guessed, beyond the feel ...
Scientists have long struggled to define brain fog—let alone pinpoint a cause for it. But research is starting to reveal multiple potential causes from inflammation to a leaky blood-brain barrier.