ScienceAlert on MSN
Even low levels of alcohol could damage your brain, study finds
(juanpablo/Pexels) We know that too much booze is bad for us, but a new study reveals that even a low level of alcohol intake ...
A study reveals that early patterns of stress-driven drinking may quietly reshape the brain in ways that persist into midlife ...
Every experience leaves a trace in the brain, a memory that can shape future behavior. Alcohol and other addictive substances ...
A massive new study combining observational and genetic data overturns the long-held belief that light drinking protects the brain. Researchers found that dementia risk rises in direct proportion to ...
Every experience leaves a trace in the brain, a memory that can shape future behavior. Alcohol and other addictive substances ...
However, the interpretation that beer is therefore "brain boosting" is problematic. Many foods provide vitamin B6.
The campus social scene sees many students ready to “party hearty” with alcohol. New University of Oregon research says ...
A few glasses of alcohol are enough to start fragmenting the way the brain works, leading to more localized information processing and reduced brain-wide communication, a new study has discovered.
Stress and alcohol are frequently framed as cause and effect: You feel overwhelmed, you drink, you calm down. In reality, alcohol may be disabling the very brain systems that would help you respond to ...
WHEN it came to work drinks, Steve Roe prided himself on always being the “last man standing”, seeking out that “one last ...
Recent studies continue to support a decades-old drug as an alternative means of reducing alcohol consumption. The prescription opioid antagonist, called naltrexone, was first approved by the FDA to ...
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