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Risk
for Alcoholism linked to risk for Obesity
Newswise, January 3, 2011 — Addiction
researchers at Washington University School
of Medicine in St. Louis have found that a
risk for alcoholism also may put individuals
at risk for obesity.
The researchers noted that the association
between a family history of alcoholism and
obesity risk has become more pronounced in
recent years. Both men and women with such a
family history were more likely to be obese
in 2002 than members of that same high-risk
group had been in 1992.
“In addiction research, we often look at
what we call cross-heritability, which
addresses the question of whether the
predisposition to one condition also might
contribute to other conditions,” says first
author Richard A. Grucza, PhD. “For example,
alcoholism and drug abuse are
cross-heritable.
This new study demonstrates a
cross-heritability between alcoholism and
obesity, but it also says — and this is very
important — that some of the risks must be a
function of the environment. The environment
is what changed between the 1990s and the
2000s. It wasn’t people’s genes.”
Obesity in the United States has doubled in
recent decades from 15 percent of the
population in the late 1970s to 33 percent
in 2004. Obese people – those with a body
mass index (BMI) of 30 or more – have an
elevated risk for high blood pressure,
diabetes, heart disease, stroke and certain
cancers.
Reporting in the Archives
of General Psychiatry, Grucza and his
team say individuals with a family history
of alcoholism, particularly women, have an
elevated obesity risk. In addition, that
risk seems to be growing. He speculates that
may result from changes in the food we eat
and the availability of more foods that
interact with the same brain areas as
addictive drugs.
“Much of what we eat nowadays contains more
calories than the food we ate in the 1970s
and 1980s, but it also contains the sorts of
calories — particularly a combination of
sugar, salt and fat — that appeal to what
are commonly called the reward centers in
the brain,” says Grucza, an assistant
professor of psychiatry.
“Alcohol and drugs
affect those same parts of the brain, and
our thinking was that because the same brain
structures are being stimulated,
overconsumption of those foods might be
greater in people with a predisposition to
addiction.”
Grucza hypothesized that as Americans
consumed more high-calorie, hyper-palatable
foods, those with a genetic risk for
addiction would face an elevated risk from
because of the effects of those foods on the
reward centers in the brain. His team
analyzed data from two large alcoholism
surveys from the last two decades.
The National Longitudinal Alcohol
Epidemiologic Survey was conducted in 1991
and 1992. The National Epidemiologic Survey
on Alcohol and Related Conditions was
conducted in 2001 and 2002. Almost 80,000
people took part in the two surveys.
“We looked particularly at family history of
alcoholism as a marker of risk,” Grucza
explains. “And we found that in 2001 and
2002, women with that history were 49
percent more likely to be obese than those
without a family history of alcoholism. We
also noticed a relationship in men, but it
was not as striking in men as in women.”
Grucza says a possible explanation for
obesity in those with a family history of
alcoholism is that some individuals may
substitute one addiction for another. After
seeing a close relative deal with alcohol
problems, a person may shy away from
drinking, but high-calorie, hyper-palatable
foods also can stimulate the reward centers
in their brains and give them effects
similar to what they might experience from
alcohol.
“Ironically, people with alcoholism tend not
to be obese,” Grucza says.
“They tend to be malnourished, or at least
under-nourished because many replace their
food intake with alcohol. One might think
that the excess calories associated with
alcohol consumption could, in theory,
contribute to obesity, but that’s not what
we saw in these individuals.”
Grucza says other variables, from smoking,
to alcohol intake, to demographic factors
like age and education levels don’t seem to
explain the association between alcoholism
risk and obesity.
“It really does appear to be a change in the
environment,” he says. “I would speculate,
although I can’t really prove this, that a
change in the food environment brought this
association about. There is a whole slew of
literature out there suggesting these
hyper-palatable foods appeal to people with
addictive tendencies, and I would guess
that’s what we’re seeing in our study.”
The results, he says, suggest there should
be more cross-talk between alcohol and
addiction researchers and those who study
obesity. He says there may be some people
for whom treating one of those disorders
also might aid the other.
This work was supported by grants from the
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and
Alcoholism and the National Institute on
Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of
Health.
Washington University School of Medicine’s
2,100 employed and volunteer faculty
physicians also are the medical staff of
Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's
hospitals. The School of Medicine is one of
the leading medical research, teaching and
patient care institutions in the nation,
currently ranked fourth in the nation by
U.S. News & World Report. Through its
affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St.
Louis Children's hospitals, the School of
Medicine is linked to BJC HealthCare.