Alcoholics'
Deficits In Smell Are Linked To Frontal Lobe
Dysfunction
July 25, 2006
Prior research has shown that chronic alcoholism
is associated with numerous olfactory deficits
in odor judgment, odor identification, odor
sensitivity, and the ability to qualitatively
discriminate between odors. New findings indicate
that olfactory deficits among alcoholics are
associated with prefrontal cognitive dysfunction,
specifically, impairment in the functional integrity
of the prefrontal lobe.
Results are published in
the August issue of Alcoholism: Clinical &
Experimental Research.
"Both frontal and medial temporal lobe
brain regions play a major role in olfactory
functioning, particularly in the abilities of
odor quality discrimination and identification,"
said Claudia I. Rupp, clinical neuropsychologist
and assistant professor in the department of
psychiatry at Innsbruck Medical University,
and corresponding author for the study.
"Given that alcohol can cause brain damage
and dysfunction in frontal and medial temporal
brain regions, and that neuropsychological tasks
such as executive function and memory may represent
sensitive measures of the integrity of these
brain areas, we were interested in whether olfactory
deficits in alcohol dependence are related to
executive dysfunctions or memory impairments,"
she said.
Rupp and her colleagues examined 32 alcoholics
(18 males, 14 females) and 30 healthy "controls"
(16 males, 14 females) that were matched on
age, gender and smoking status. All participants
were assessed in three areas: olfactory function
(detection threshold, quality discrimination,
identification), executive function (using the
Wisconsin Card Sorting Test), and memory (using
the German version of the California Verbal
Learning Test).
"We found that the alcoholics, when compared
to the controls, were impaired in all three
domains investigated: olfactory functions, executive
function, and memory," said Rupp. "We
also found that impairments in all three domains
appear resistant to early recovery after alcohol
drinking stopped. Furthermore, olfactory discrimination
deficits appear to be associated with executive
function impairment. Collectively speaking,
our results suggest that olfactory discrimination
deficits and executive function impairment may
share a common neural substrate -- that is,
a pathological process may be mediating both
deficits most likely dysfunctional mechanisms
involving the frontal lobe."
Rupp said that her findings help support the
hypothesis that frontal lobes are particularly
vulnerable to alcoholism-related damage, and
that dysfunction in this region may play a significant
role in alcoholism and other drug addictions.
"Our findings add to the mounting evidence
for frontal lobe dysfunction in alcoholism,
which may be involved in the development of
addiction, may mediate recovery in persons with
alcohol-use disorders, and may play a key role
in understanding the neurobiology of alcoholism,"
she said.
Rupp added that her study's findings raise
some serious clinical concerns. "Olfactory
dysfunction can seriously impair people in their
day-to-day activities and occupation, increase
their risk of injury or even death, and reduce
their overall quality of life," she said.
"These deficits may not only reduce patients'
enjoyment of foods, but may also place them
at risk for long term nutritional or health
sequelae. Individuals may alter food choices
and intake, resulting in weight loss, challenged
immunity and impaired nutritional status ...
all of which are commonly observed in patients
with chronic alcoholism. Nutritional deficiencies,
moreover, also have notorious deleterious effects
on brain structure and cognitive functioning.
Future research needs to investigate the functional
impact of olfactory dysfunction in alcohol dependence."
Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research
(ACER) is the official journal of the Research
Society on Alcoholism and the International
Society for Biomedical Research on Alcoholism.
Co-authors of the ACER paper, "Executive
Function and Memory in Relation to Olfactory
Deficits in Alcohol-Dependent Patients,"
were: W. Wolfgang Fleischhacker, Armand Hausmann,
Hartmann Hinterhuber, and Martin Kurz of the
Department of Psychiatry at Innsbruck Medical
University; and Arthur Drexler of the Institute
of Communication and Psychotherapy at the University
of Innsbruck.
Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/07/060725092208.htm |
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