Alcohol may be deeply woven into social life — from casual drinks with friends to celebrations and late-night cocktails — but growing scientific evidence suggests even moderate drinking can damage the body in ways many people do not realise. The good news, experts say, is that some of that damage can be slowed, stopped or even reversed if people cut down or quit early enough.
“Alcohol is inherently toxic,” Dr Andrew Freeman, director of cardiovascular prevention and wellness at National Jewish Health in Denver, told CNN. “We use alcohol to disinfect; we use alcohol to kill organisms. So, the question is, is any amount of it safe?”
According to health researchers, alcohol is directly linked to dozens of diseases, including liver damage, pancreatitis,
heart disease and certain cancers. Scientists also say alcohol weakens the body’s immune system, harms the brain and raises long-term health risks even at lower levels of consumption.
Alcohol Weakens Immunity
Experts say alcohol can begin suppressing the immune system within minutes of consumption. Studies cited by CNN found that even one episode of binge drinking can disrupt immune response for up to 24 hours.
Jürgen Rehm, a senior scientist at the Institute for Mental Health Policy Research in Toronto, said chronic alcohol use can permanently damage immune cells responsible for fighting infections.
However, there is a recovery window. Depending on the level of drinking, immune function can begin improving within days or weeks after reducing alcohol intake or stopping completely, experts say.
Cancer And Other Risks
Alcohol is now considered one of the leading preventable causes of cancer. Researchers say alcohol damages DNA and increases chronic inflammation, raising the risk of breast, colorectal and several other cancers.
Scientists also say alcohol damages connections between brain cells, leading to memory and decision-making problems. Some studies suggest brain shrinkage linked to alcohol use may partially recover within weeks or months of abstinence.
Sinclair Carr of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health told CNN that attention, memory and executive functioning can improve after people stop drinking, though heavy long-term drinking may leave lasting effects.
On heart health, experts say earlier beliefs that moderate drinking benefits the heart are increasingly being challenged. Freeman said current evidence suggests alcohol may ultimately do more harm than good.
“Most of the professional societies tell people not to start drinking, drink as little as possible if they do drink, or stop drinking altogether,” he said.




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