Long-term smoking causes a thinning of the brain's cortex, which can
lead to memory loss, according to a major international study.
The cortex - the outer layer of the brain - naturally thins with old age, but smoking appears to accelerate the thinning, effectively ageing smokers' brains more quickly.
The
study - the largest of its kind so far - examined more than 500
patients with an average age of 73 - including current smokers,
ex-smokers and non-smokers.
All of the subjects had been examined in 1947 as children, and then more data and scans were taken in the last few years.
“We
found that current and ex-smokers had, at age 73, many areas of thinner
brain cortex than those that never smoked. Subjects who stopped smoking
seem to partially recover their cortical thickness for each year
without smoking," says the study's lead author Dr Sherif Karama,
assistant professor of psychiatry at McGill University.
Although
it was possible to recover some of the thickness, this process took a
very long time. Even those who had given up smoking 25 years previously
still had a thinner cortex.
However, the fact that your brain can partially recover should serve
as “a strong motivational argument” to encourage people to quit.
People
with age-related thinning of the cerebral cortex can try and slow the
mental decline by taking exercise, getting enough vitamin D and fatty
acids and lowering cholesterol.
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