Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Smoking shrinks brain, genes play crucial role: Study

Researchers found that the more packs a person smoked per day, the smaller their brain volume

Smoking shrinks brain, genes play crucial role: Study

New research has found that smoking causes the brain to shrink, with genetics potentially playing a significant role, as roughly half of the smoking-related risk could be attributed to one's genetic makeup.

Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine, US, said that since a natural reduction in brain volume is usually seen to occur with age, smoking therefore effectively ages the brain prematurely.


The findings help explain why smokers are at a high risk of age-related cognitive decline and Alzheimer's disease, which is a neurodegenerative disease affecting some people progressively with age, the researchers said.

"Up until recently, scientists have overlooked the effects of smoking on the brain, in part because we were focused on all the terrible effects of smoking on the lungs and the heart," said Laura J. Bierut, professor of psychiatry and senior author of the study is published in the journal Biological Psychiatry: Global Open Science.

"But as we've started looking at the brain more closely, it's become apparent that smoking is also really bad for your brain," said Bierut.

The researchers said that quitting smoking can prevent further damage, even as it cannot restore the brain to its original size.

Previous studies have found both brain size and smoking behaviour to be heritable.

Thus, in this study, the scientists wanted to better understand the relationship between genes, brains, and smoking behaviour.

The team overall analysed data on brain volume (determined through brain imaging), smoking history and genetic smoking risk for 32,094 people from the UK Biobank.

The public biomedical database contains genetic, health and behavioural information on half a million people, mostly of European descent.

The researchers found that each of the pair of factors were linked - smoking history and genetic smoking risk, genetic smoking risk and brain volume, and brain volume and smoking history.

They also found that the more packs a person smoked per day, the smaller their brain volume.

Further, when the team considered all the three factors together, they found that the link between genetic smoking risk and brain volume disappeared.

The other two links - those between smoking history and genetic smoking risk, and brain volume and smoking history - still remained, however, they found.

Using statistical analysis, the researchers determined the chain of events as thus - genetic risk leads to smoking, which leads to a reduced brain volume.

"It sounds bad, and it is bad. A reduction in brain volume is consistent with increased aging. This is important as our population gets older, because aging and smoking are both risk factors for dementia," said Bierut.

The researchers also found that the shrinkage effects were irreversible by analysing data of people who had quit smoking years before. They found that these people's brains remained permanently smaller than those of people who had never smoked.

"You can't undo the damage that has already been done, but you can avoid causing further damage," said first author Yoonhoo Chang, a graduate student at the university.

(PTI)

More For You

Mohua Chinappa

She believes her work is shaped by a single purpose: giving voice to those who have been unheard for far too long

Mohua Chinappa

Mohua Chinappa on why homemakers, their unseen labour, and midlife reinvention can no longer be ignored

Highlights

  • Mohua Chinappa says advocacy for homemakers and marginalised women drives her work
  • She calls unpaid domestic labour a long-ignored injustice in Indian households
  • Chinappa describes midlife as a moment of freedom, not decline, for South Asian women

Writer, podcaster and advocate Mohua Chinappa says the stories that matter most to her are those that rarely make it into the spotlight. From homemakers to queer communities, she believes her work is shaped by a single purpose: giving voice to those who have been unheard for far too long.

Speaking in a recent conversation, Chinappa draws directly from her own life to explain why the quiet labour of women, especially homemakers, needs urgent recognition.

Keep ReadingShow less