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Q J Med 2000; 93: 449-456
© 2000 Association of Physicians

High ethanol intake and malnutrition in alcoholic cerebellar shrinkage

J.M. Nicolás, J. Fernández-Solà, J. Robert, E. Antúnez, M. Cofán, C. Cardenal1, E. Sacanella, R. Estruch and A. Urbano-Márquez

From the Departments of Internal Medicine and 1 Radiology, Hospital Clínic, Facultat de Medicina, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain

To determine the influence of chronic ethanol intake and nutritional status on cerebellar shrinkage in alcoholism, we studied 12 undernourished patients with acute Wernicke's encephalopathy (WE), 12 undernourished and 24 well-nourished asymptomatic chronic alcoholics, and 24 age-matched well-nourished controls, using morphometric analysis of MRI scans with volumetry of the cerebellum. Alcoholics reported a mean daily intake of ethanol of 177±8 g over a period of 27±1 years. Most undernourished alcoholics and half of the well-nourished alcoholics, compared to one-tenth of the controls, showed a significant reduction in cerebellar volume (p<=0.01, both). Alcoholics with cerebellar shrinkage (n=33) were older (p=0.05) and tended to report greater daily ethanol intake than alcoholics without cerebellar shrinkage (n=15), although not significantly so (p=0.09). Cerebellar volume correlated negatively with age in controls and asymptomatic alcoholics (r>=0.52, p<=0.01, both), with a significantly greater shrinkage for age in the latter (p=0.003). Logistic regression analysis showed that malnutrition (OR 6.6 [95%CI 1.7–25.6], p=0.005) and a daily ethanol intake of more than 140 g over ten years (OR 6.1 [95%CI 1.8–20.5], p=0.003) were independently associated with the development of cerebellar shrinkage.

Address correspondence to Dr J.M. Nicolás, Department of Internal Medicine, Hospital Clínic, Villarroel 170, 08036 Barcelona, Spain. e-mail: nicolas{at}medicina.ub.es


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