Alcoholic Dementia
Maurice Victor

Abstract:
At least four distinct cerebral diseases Wernicke-Korsakoff,
Marchiafava-Bignami, pellagrous encephalopathy, and acquired
hepatocerebral degeneration have a close association
with chronic alcoholism. Each is characterized by a distinctive
pathologic change and a reasonably well-established pathogenesis;
in each the role of alcohol in the causation is secondary. The
question posed in this review is whether there is, in addition
to the established types of dementia associated with alcoholism,
a persistent dementia attributable to the direct toxic effects
of alcohol on the brain i.e., a primary alcoholic dementia.
The clinical, psychologic, radiologic, and pathologic evidence
bearing on this question is critically reviewed. None of the
evidence permits the clear delineation of such an entity. The
most serious flaw in the argument for a primary alcoholic dementia
is that it lacks a distinctive, well-defined pathology, and
it must remain ambiguous until such time as its morphologic
basis is established.
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Can.
J. Neurol. Sci. 1994; 21: 88-99
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