News Summary
Experts once believed that it took a long period
of heavy drinking to injure the brain, but mounting research suggests
that alcohol may readily damage the developing brains of
teenagers, the New
York Times reported July 4.
Preliminary animal research has shown that doses
of alcohol similar to binge drinking episodes may cause cellular
damage to the forebrain and hippocampus of adolescents, perhaps
explaining why -- as a different
study of human subjects recently found -- people
who begin drinking at a young age are at much higher risk of becoming
alcoholics. Studies also have shown that young drinkers perform poorly
on a variety of cognitive tests.
"There is no doubt about it now: there are
long-term cognitive consequences to excessive drinking of alcohol in
adolescence," said Aaron White, assistant research professor in
the psychiatry department at Duke University. "We definitely
didn't know 5 or 10 years ago that alcohol affected the teen brain
differently. Now there's a sense of urgency. It's the same place we
were in when everyone realized what a bad thing it was for pregnant
women to drink alcohol."
Researchers have found that alcohol suppresses the
action of chemical receptors in the hippocampus of young rats,
impairing the development of new memories. Drinking affected the
learning ability of young rats far more than it impaired the cognitive
function of older rats. While it is uncertain how directly applicable
the rat studies are to people, the findings are consistent with recent
research exploring the neurobiological effects of alcohol in
adolescent humans.
Young drinkers may experience more alcohol-related
"blackouts" than previously believed, which may be explained
by the effect of drinking on the developing hippocampus. Drinking also
appears to make the brain less responsive to the neurotransmitter GABA
among young people; GABA helps induce calmness and sleepiness, which
may be why young drinkers can often remain conscious and keep drinking
even after older drinkers pass out.
"Clearly, something is changed in the brain
by early alcohol exposure," said Scott Swartzwelder, a
neuropsychologist at Duke and at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center
in Durham, N.C. "It's a double-edged sword and both of the edges
are bad. Teenagers can drink far more than adults before they get
sleepy enough to stop, but along the way they're impairing their
cognitive functions much more powerfully."
Impulse control also is impaired by drinking,
research shows -- a particular hazard for already impetuous youth.
"Alcohol creates disruption in parts of the brain essential for
self-control, motivation and goal setting," said University of
North Carolina researcher Fulton Crews. "Early drinking is
affecting a sensitive brain in a way that promotes the progression to
addiction."
"Let's say you've been arrested for driving
while drunk and spent seven days in jail," Crews added.
"You'd think, 'No way am I going to speed and drive drunk again,'
because you have the ability to weigh the consequences and the
importance of a behavior. This is exactly what addicts don't do."
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