Abstract

The objectives of the present study are to determine the effects of alcohol use on the retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) thickness and macular thickness of abstinent patients with alcohol use disorders (AUD) and to assess whether it correlates with alcohol consumption and/or cognitive impairment. This was a prospective, observational study that included 21 patients (42 eyes) and 21 controls (42 eyes). Patients met the criteria for early remission AUD at the moment of inclusion. We used optical coherence tomography to assess retinal thickness. Macular thickness in the group of AUD patients was lower in all quadrants (p < 0.05), with the exception of the peripheral and central. Regarding the nerve fiber layer in the macular and papilla areas, we found no significant differences. At the retina ganglion cell layer and in the nerve fiber of the macula, we found significant differences in all quadrants (p < 0.05), with the exception of the superior and superior nasal area, for the right eye. For the left eye, the only differences were found in the lower quadrant. Finally, when comparing the AUD patients to the controls, we found significant reductions in the ganglion cell layer of the macula in all quadrants in the former. There was a significant correlation between these findings and cognitive impairment (measured with the Test de Detección de Deterioro Cognitivo en Alcoholismo (TEDCA)), but not with alcohol consumption. Alcohol consumption is correlated with retinal harm and related cognitive decline.

Highlights

  • Excessive alcohol consumption currently constitutes a huge, worldwide social health issue.The latest health report of the World Health Organization (WHO) published in 2018 [1] highlighted that3.1 billion people worldwide had consumed alcohol in the last year, 2.1 billion of whom were regular consumers

  • Due to the high level of alcohol consumption worldwide and the neurotoxicity caused by alcohol, we aimed to carry out a study on abstinent alcoholic patients who met the criteria for alcohol use disorders (AUD)

  • AUD patients met the criteria for harmful drinking was 24.14 ± 6.75

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Summary

Introduction

Excessive alcohol consumption currently constitutes a huge, worldwide social health issue.The latest health report of the World Health Organization (WHO) published in 2018 [1] highlighted that3.1 billion people worldwide had consumed alcohol in the last year, 2.1 billion of whom were regular consumers. Excessive alcohol consumption currently constitutes a huge, worldwide social health issue. The latest health report of the World Health Organization (WHO) published in 2018 [1] highlighted that. 3.1 billion people worldwide had consumed alcohol in the last year, 2.1 billion of whom were regular consumers. In 2016 harmful alcohol use caused approximately 3 million deaths worldwide (5.3%), reaching even higher rates than deaths caused by diabetes, HIV/AIDS, and tuberculosis [1].

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