Smokers often say that smoking a cigarette helps them concentrate
and feel more alert. But years of tobacco use may have the
opposite effect, dimming the speed and accuracy of a person's
thinking ability and bringing down their IQ, according to
a new study led by University of Michigan researchers.
The association between long-term smoking and diminished
mental proficiency in 172 alcoholic and non-alcoholic men
was a surprising finding from a study that set out to examine
alcoholism's long-term effect on the brain and thinking
skills.
While the researchers confirmed previous findings that
alcoholism is associated with thinking problems and lower
IQ, their analysis also revealed that long-term smoking
is too. The effect on memory, problem-solving and IQ was
most pronounced among those who had smoked for years. Among
the alcoholic men, smoking was associated with diminished
thinking ability even after alcohol and drug use were accounted
for.
The findings are the first to suggest a direct relationship
between smoking and neurocognitive function among men with
alcoholism. And, the results suggest that smoking is associated
with diminished thinking ability even among men without
alcohol problems.
The new findings, released online before publication by
the journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence, were made by a
team from the U-M Medical School's Addiction Research Center,
or UMARC, and their colleagues at the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare
System and Michigan State University.
Lead author Jennifer Glass, Ph.D., a research assistant
professor in the U-M Department of Psychiatry, cautions
that the findings need to be duplicated by other studies
before any conclusions are made about smoking's effect on
the brain, or before the findings can be considered relevant
to women.
But, she says, the findings should prompt alcoholism researchers
to re-examine their data for any impact from smoking --
a factor that is not usually taken into account in studies
of alcoholism's effects on the brain, despite the fact that
50 percent to 80 percent of alcoholics smoke. Meanwhile,
the U-M-led team is launching a study that will examine
the issue in adolescents, and plans to test the 172 men
again soon.
"We can't say that we've found a cause-and-effect relationship
between smoking and decreased thinking ability, or neurocognitive
proficiency," says Glass. "But we hope our findings of an
association will lead to further examination of this important
issue. Perhaps it will help give smokers one more reason
to quit, and encourage quitting smoking among those who
are also trying to control their drinking."
Many alcoholism-recovery programs don't emphasize quitting
smoking, even though smoking can be a social and possibly
chemical "cue" associated with alcohol consumption.
Glass notes that her team's paper is being published, coincidentally,
at the same time as a paper from a team at the University
of California, San Francisco, in which brain scans showed
that alcoholics who smoke have lower brain volume than alcoholics
who don't smoke, and that cognitive function decreases with
brain volume among non-smoking alcoholics, but not smoking
alcoholics.
Taken together with previous epidemiological studies, the
two new papers feed a growing body of evidence for a link
between long-term smoking and thinking ability, says Robert
Zucker, Ph.D., professor of Psychology in the U-M Departments
of Psychiatry and Psychology, and director of the UMARC.
Zucker is senior author on the new paper led by Glass.
"The exact mechanism for smoking's impact on the brain's
higher functions is still unclear, but may involve both
neurochemical effects and damage to the blood vessels that
supply the brain," Zucker says. "This is consistent with
other findings that people with cardiovascular disease and
lung disease tend to have reduced neurocognitive function."
The data for the new paper by Glass, Zucker and their colleagues
at U-M and Michigan State University, come from an ongoing
longitudinal, or long-term, project that uses interviews
and standardized research questionnaires to look at mental
and physical health issues in families, measured every three
years.
The study, which has run for more than fifteen years and
recently was funded for another five, is supported by the
National Institute of Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse, part
of the National Institutes of Health. The new work that
will explore these relationships further in youth is being
funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, also a part
of the NIH.
In their ninth year in the study, participants completed
the MicroCog Assessment of Cognitive Function, a well-established
standard battery of tests that assess short-term memory,
immediate and delayed story recall, verbal analogies, mathematical
reasoning and visual-spatial processing.
Scores for each test, and a global proficiency score, are
based on the speed and accuracy of a person's responses,
adjusted for age and education level. The participants also
took a short form of the standard IQ test, and their scores
were adjusted for age.
Forty of the men had clinically diagnosable alcoholism
at the time of the test, though none had been drinking within
an hour of the tests. Twenty-four of these men also were
smokers. The study also included 63 men who had had alcoholism
earlier in life, 29 of whom smoked; and 69 men who had never
been alcoholic, 13 of whom smoked. All smokers were allowed
to smoke at will during the testing session, so none were
in a nicotine-deprived state when they took the neurocognitive
tests.
Glass and her colleagues analyzed the participants' scores
using two standard measures of long-term drinking and smoking
behavior: lifetime alcohol problem severity, or LAPS, and
pack-years, a measure that takes into account the number
of packs of cigarettes a person smoked each day and the
number of years they smoked that much.
Across the board, both smoking and drinking showed an effect:
Higher pack-years and LAPS scores were both significantly
associated with lower global cognitive proficiency scores
and IQ.
When the researchers limited the analysis to those participants
who had ever had a diagnosis of alcoholism during their
lifetime, they still found a significant association between
LAPS scores and IQ, and between pack-years and both IQ and
overall cognitive proficiency. In fact, the impact of heavy
lifetime smoking history was greater than the effect of
lifetime drinking history.
This finding, Glass says, means that alcoholism researchers
who have consistently found evidence of cognitive deficits
among alcoholics -- but who have not taken smoking into
account in their analysis -- may actually be seeing a combined
effect of smoking and alcohol consumption among alcoholic
study participants who smoke. Further analyses of these
data, with smoking separated out as a variable just as hard
drug use is often separated, is needed, she says.
- More articles on smoking