Smoking Is Bad for the Brain
Smoking not only damages health, it
is bad for the brain too, according to a Scottish study spanning
nearly 60 years.
Professor Lawrence Whalley and
his team looked at how the cognitive abilities of 465 people,
half of them smokers, changed over their lifetime.
They were first tested in 1947,
at 11 years old and examined again between 2000 and 2002 when
they were 64.
Smokers performed significantly
worse in five different cognitive tests than did both former smokers
and those who had never smoked.
When social and health behavior
was taken into account -- factors like education, occupation and
alcohol consumption -- smoking still appeared to contribute to
a drop in cognitive function of just less than 1 percent.
The link between cognitive aging
and impaired lung functions could be that smoking subjects the
vital organs, including the brain, to oxidative stress, suggests
Whalley, of the Department of Mental Health at the University
of Aberdeen.
The study he and colleagues at
the University of Edinburgh produced appears in New Scientist
magazine.
Reference
Source 89
December 9, 2004
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