Meth messes up brains of youths far more than adults
Adolescents who chronically use methamphetamine suffer
greater and more widespread alterations in their brain than adults who
chronically abuse the drug-and damage is particularly evident in a part of the
brain believed to control the "executive function," researchers from
the University of Utah and South Korea report.
In a study with chronic adolescent
and adult meth abusers in South Korea, MRI brain scans showed decreased
thickness in the gray matter of younger users' frontal cortex, the area of the
brain believed to direct people's ability to organize, reason and remember
things, known as the executive function. A different type of MRI, diffusion
tensor imaging (DTI), indicated alterations to the adolescents' white matter,
meaning possible damage to neurons-the cells that relay information via
electrical signals from one part of the brain to another. The gray and white
matter of chronic adult meth users showed far less damage than that of the
adolescents.
The researchers found the evidence
of damage to cortical thickness in the frontal cortex of adolescent users
alarming.
"It's particularly unfortunate
that meth appears to damage that part of the brain, which is still developing
in young people and is critical for cognitive ability," says In Kyoon
Lyoo, M.D., Ph.D., of Ewha W. University in Seoul, South Korea. "Damage to
that part of the brain is especially problematic because adolescents' ability
to control risky behavior is less mature than that of adults. The findings may
help explain the severe behavioral issues and relapses that are common in
adolescent drug addiction."
Lyoo is first author on the study,
published Feb. 10, 2015, in Molecular
Psychiatry online. Perry F. Renshaw, M.D.,
Ph.D., M.B.A., University of Utah USTAR investigator and professor of
psychiatry, is the study's senior author.
The results also indicate that it
might take much less meth to cause greater damage in adolescent brains because
youths typically use smaller amounts of the drug than adults.
Meth is the one of the most widely abused
drugs in Asia, but it's also a problem in the United States, with the Western
region of the country experiencing the highest rates of use. Studies with
rodents have shown that meth damages the brains of adult rats more than young
ones, but whether that holds true in people has been cause for debate.
In one of the largest studies of its
type, Lyoo, Renshaw and their colleagues scanned the brains of 111 South Korean
adolescents and 114 adults. Among the younger people, 51 used meth while 60 did
not. The adults included 54 meth users and 60 non-users.
"There is a critical period of
brain development for specific functions, and it appears that adolescents who
abuse methamphetamine are at great risk for derailing that process,"
Renshaw says. "I think the results show it is hugely important to keep
kids off drugs."
Comments
Post a Comment