与饮酒有关的慢性疾病和病症。

IF 6.8 1区 医学 Q1 SUBSTANCE ABUSE Alcohol Research : Current Reviews Pub Date : 2013-01-01
Kevin D Shield, Charles Parry, Jürgen Rehm
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引用次数: 0

摘要

饮酒是许多慢性疾病和病症的风险因素。酒精的平均消费量、消费模式和酒精饮料的质量可能对与慢性疾病和病症有关的死亡率和发病率产生因果影响。国际疾病分类(ICD)-10中的25种慢性病和病症代码完全可归因于酒精,酒精在某些癌症、其他肿瘤、神经精神疾病以及许多心血管和消化系统疾病中起着组成风险作用。此外,酒精对糖尿病、缺血性中风和缺血性心脏病既有有益的影响,也有有害的影响,这取决于酒精消耗的总量,以及在缺血性疾病的情况下的消费模式。然而,用于计算相对风险和酒精归因分数的方法存在局限性。此外,新的研究和混杂因素可能导致更多的疾病与饮酒有因果关系,或者可能推翻饮酒与目前被认为有因果关系的某些疾病之间的关系。这些限制并不影响以下结论:酒精消费显著增加了全球慢性疾病和病症的负担,这一负担应成为干预的目标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Chronic diseases and conditions related to alcohol use.

Alcohol consumption is a risk factor for many chronic diseases and conditions. The average volume of alcohol consumed, consumption patterns, and quality of the alcoholic beverages consumed likely have a causal impact on the mortality and morbidity related to chronic diseases and conditions. Twenty-five chronic disease and condition codes in the International Classification of Disease (ICD)-10 are entirely attributable to alcohol, and alcohol plays a component-risk role in certain cancers, other tumors, neuropsychiatric conditions, and numerous cardiovascular and digestive diseases. Furthermore, alcohol has both beneficial and detrimental impacts on diabetes, ischemic stroke, and ischemic heart disease, depending on the overall volume of alcohol consumed, and, in the case of ischemic diseases, consumption patterns. However, limitations exist to the methods used to calculate the relative risks and alcohol-attributable fractions. Furthermore, new studies and confounders may lead to additional diseases being causally linked to alcohol consumption, or may disprove the relationship between alcohol consumption and certain diseases that currently are considered to be causally linked. These limitations do not affect the conclusion that alcohol consumption significantly contributes to the burden of chronic diseases and conditions globally, and that this burden should be a target for intervention.

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期刊介绍: Alcohol Research: Current Reviews (ARCR) is an open-access, peer-reviewed journal published by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) at the National Institutes of Health. Starting from 2020, ARCR follows a continuous, rolling publication model, releasing one virtual issue per yearly volume. The journal offers free online access to its articles without subscription or pay-per-view fees. Readers can explore the content of the current volume, and past volumes are accessible in the journal's archive. ARCR's content, including previous titles, is indexed in PubMed, PsycINFO, Scopus, and Web of Science.
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