Heavy drinking is tied to earlier and more severe brain bleeds, a new study found. The paper, recently published in the journal Neurology, examined the link between alcohol and intracerebral haemorrhages – the deadliest, most disabling type of stroke. The researchers found that so-called heavy drinkers – people who had three or more drinks per day – developed a stroke on average 11 years earlier than those who had fewer than three drinks per day. They also had larger brain bleeds that were more difficult to manage.
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