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MS Paint Art - November 2010

Consequences of teenage drug abuse

November 30th 2010 20:59

teenage drug abuse long term consequences
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Teenage drug abusers may experience more severe consequences later in life than adults who abuse drugs.


Studies conducted by Joshua Gulley, assistant professor of psychology, assessed the effects of high doses of amphetamine, a psychostimulant present in drugs that treat ADHD, on rats at different stages of life. When rats were exposed to large amounts of amphetamines during adolescence, they exhibited impaired working memory as adults.

“This is a long-lasting change we are talking about,” Gulley said, explaining that the studies were designed to be comparable to assessing how amphetamine abuse in humans that occurs during teen years would affect working memory at around age 30.

Lee Cox, associate professor of molecular and integrative physiology, collaborated with Gulley to study the effects of drug abuse on neuron function and physiology in the prefrontal cortex, an area of the brain that is believed to be important for working memory and decision-making.

“We know that in adolescence the prefrontal cortex is very underdeveloped,” Gulley said.

He added that it’s one of the last brain regions to develop into its adult-like state, a process that continues into a person’s mid-twenties. Additionally, the prefrontal cortex is an area of the brain that is particularly vulnerable to experiences during adolescence.


In other words, a teenager’s brain is different from an adult’s brain, and likewise, one would expect drugs to affect them differently. These differences are precisely what Gulley and co-workers have set out to discover.

“Much of the animal research has not been done on young animals because for a long time the assumption was the adult brain was basically the same as the adolescent brain,” Gulley said. “What we’ve realized over the past ten or so years is that’s completely not true.”

Studies on the effects of drugs on adolescents are especially important because most drug abusers have their first exposure to drugs while in their teens, Gulley said.

Gulley emphasized that the studies performed thus far look at the effects of high drug doses, comparable to levels that would be used if someone was abusing the drug.

Additional studies would be needed to determine the long-term effects of amphetamine doses comparable to those prescribed in drugs such as Adderall, which is used to treat ADHD.

The first round of studies on the effects of amphetamines on rats involved testing some animals for behavioral changes, and others for changes in neuronal physiology.

In the next round of studies, Gulley says they hope to discover how individual differences in animals affect the way they respond to drugs. To do so, they will simultaneously study the changes in behavior and physiology after adolescent drug exposure.

They expect to see rats with more disordered brain physiology having greater behavioral disorders, Gulley said. This observation would support the idea that neuronal changes are associated with, and perhaps causative of, the adverse effects on memory that have been observed in rats after adolescent drug exposure.

Luke Sherrill, a psychology graduate student who works with Gulley, studies the effects of alcohol abuse on rats with the goal of understanding its long-term ramifications.

Performed in collaboration with Janice Juraska, professor of psychology, studies thus far support the idea that “adolescent alcohol exposure can produce unique changes on the way neurons communicate and the way the brain develops in general,” Sherrill said.

Being on a college campus and observing how many students get into alcohol and other drugs, Sherrill says he became interested in understanding what happens in the brain as a result of these activities.

“There are so many people who use alcohol or other drugs,” Sherrill said. “It’s such a prevalent thing in society, and alcohol is so ingrained in our culture, but there’s still a lot that we don’t know about [its effects].”

Gulley said he would also like to better understand why many people try drugs at some point in their life, but only a small percentage become addicted.

Researchers are interested in being able to predict “who’s going to develop an addiction and who’s not, and [understand] what might be different about people who are more susceptible versus others,” Gulley said.

Once the differences are discovered, “the next step would be to target those differences and discover pharmacological interventions or behavioral interventions to prevent drug addiction before it happens,” said Benjamin Marcus, a senior in LAS who works in Gulley’s lab.

Given the complexity of a problem such as drug addiction, it is challenging to identify what causes it. A multitude of factors, both genetic and environmental, may contribute to whether or not a drug user develops an addiction.

“It’s a pretty multi-faceted disorder, so you have to think about how you’re going to dissect it down to all its individual components that you can then systematically address,” Sherrill said.

By studying the different effects of drug abuse on behavior and physiology one at a time, Sherrill said that researchers can work toward a more complete understanding of an extremely complex phenomenon.

Future studies in the Gulley lab will include investigating the effects of amphetamines on other behaviors, as well as continuing studies on alcoholism.

Emily Venheim, another psychology graduate student in Gulley’s lab, has already performed studies looking at the effects of amphetamine abuse on impulsive behaviors and said that next she will test its effects on different aspects of attention.

Venheim said that she is motivated by the possibility that the knowledge gleaned from these studies could one day be transferred to a clinical setting to help drug abusers overcome addiction.

Gulley said he ultimately hopes this research will lead to a clearer understanding of what factors contribute to drug addiction, as well as what specific physiological changes are caused by drug abuse that may be responsible for adverse behavioral effects.

“If we have the ability to understand this at a very basic level what specifically the drugs are changing, then we have a very strong potential to either reverse or prevent those changes,” Gulley said.




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acupuncture pain relief science health
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Acupuncture alters the way that the brain perceives and processes pain, a finding that suggests the traditional Chinese treatment can effectively relieve pain, according to a new study.


German researchers used functional MRI scans to measure brain activity in 18 people who received painful electrical currents from a device fitted to their left ankle. The researchers then placed acupuncture needles on the participants' right side -- including between the toes, below the knee and near the thumb -- and again inflicted pain in the left ankle.

Without acupuncture, there was major activation of pain-processing areas of the brain. Activation in these areas was significantly reduced when the volunteers received acupuncture.

The researchers also found that acupuncture reduced activation in areas of the brain that control expectations of pain.

The study was to be presented Tuesday at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America, in Chicago.

"Acupuncture is supposed to act through at least two mechanisms, nonspecific expectancy-based effects and specific modulation of the incoming pain signal," lead author Dr. Nina Theysohn of University Hospital in Essen, Germany, said in a news release from the society. "Our findings support that both these nonspecific and specific mechanisms exist, suggesting that acupuncture can help relieve pain."






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The teen brain

November 29th 2010 22:15

teen brain adult brain cortex
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This is an excerpt from the book "CyberSafe: Protecting and Empowering Kids in the Digital World of Texting, Gaming, and Social Media," by Gwenn Schurgin O'Keeffe, MD (American Academy of Pediatrics, $14.95).

The Teen Brain

Work in progress is the best description for any growing child, especially teenagers - and their brains! Teen brains are capable of amazing thought and creativity but are becoming rewired in a fast-paced and unique way that leaves them efficient one moment and clumsy the next.

New research using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technology is beginning to sort out the complex nature of the teen brain. It's becoming very clear that teenagers do not use the same areas of the adult, mature brain right away and are driven early in the teenage process by the centers in the brain responsible for gut reaction and impulse. This is important to understand because it helps us gain perspective about why our teens don't understand social consequences or emotional messages, yet they can be overachievers in school, sports, music, or any other event they set their mind to.

Jay Giedd, MD, notes on www.dana.org, "In many ways adolescence is the healthiest time of life. The immune system, resistance to cancer, tolerance for heat and cold and several other variables are at their peak."

At the same, time, Dr. Giedd notes that mortality for teens has increased by 300 percent and in areas that are directly related to risk taking - driving resulting in accidents, weapon use resulting in homicide, and drug and alcohol use resulting in suicide. These are the number 1, 2, and 3 causes of death in this age group, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

This isn't too surprising when you take a step back and consider what parts of the brain teens use for rational thought and decision-making compared with the fully mature brain of adults. Using MRI technology, researchers, including Dr. Giedd, have been able to document that teens and adults use very different parts of the brain for similar activities, such as those involving reading of emotions, decision-making, and higher functioning.

As adults, we use our frontal lobe, the so-called CEO or executive center of our brains. Teens don't use that area of the brain for decision-making; they use a more primitive part of the brain called the amygdale. The amygdale is thought to be where our gut reactions originate. If this is where our teens' decision-making reactions are centered, it does help explain, to a degree, why they are so impulsive.

Gary Small, MD, who has studied the impact of technology on the brain and cowrote the book iBrain, agrees. Dr Small explained that the adolescent brain is still developing during the teenage years. Due to a process called pruning, 60 percent of the synaptic connections will be pruned away during these years. How our kids spend their time will likely affect this process, although, he explained, we don't yet fully understand how.

The prefrontal cortex is not fully developed in teens, so Dr. Small feels that the major question we have to consider is what the effect of increased technology is on our teens' overall development, including social interactions and empathy. Dr. Small wonders if the 40-year-old of tomorrow will be less empathetic than the 40-year-old of today because of this effect, and be less able to problem solve. He is seeing some of this play out now as he discusses the effect of technology on brains across the country. College professors have told Dr. Small that students are less focused and are texting during class.

"We jump from idea to idea like we jump from website to website," he explained in a phone interview. "We teach them ideas but it's hard to settle them down. As I was talking (in his lecture), they were texting."

Unplugging for Life

"Families are really struggling with this," noted Dr Small.

The good news is that the brain is incredibly resilient and further research will likely teach us much more about helping our teens and tweens negotiate the world with a prominent role of technology. "It takes us a while to give up what we want and technology is so alluring," he explained. "Change in behavior is a hard sell."

So not texting in class, going hands free, even unplugging once in a while will take time to relearn but are crucial for all of us, especially our growing kids.

Beyond allowing ourselves to be detached from technology, the other issue to consider is social. If we don't reclaim some unplugged time, how will our kids learn to communicate face-to-face? How will they learn to talk with each other and adults? How will they learn to settle their issues face-to-face and not with technology as an intermediary? (Dr. Small's book has exercises as well as quizzes that help identify people at risk for social problems that are worth noting.)

Much ado about nothing? I don't think so. All the experts I spoke with had at least one experience with their own tween or teen that reminded them that their own kids are struggling with social skills, even with technology at play.

Rachel Dretzin, a producer for PBS Frontline, told me how her 111/2-year-old son will answer the phone then hang up with a "Bye."

At 15, my daughter will sometimes answer the phone with "What?" Or if she calls, she will just dive into what's on her mind without saying "Hi" or "It's me."

The issue is reading faces and learning to express emotion. We can't let our kids off the hook with the difficult social and emotional tasks they will encounter growing up. Ask yourself this: are the future 40-somethings that

Dr. Small predicts the type of people you want to be parents to your future grandkids?

Technology may have an effect on our kids and their brains, but we can have a bigger effect if we pay more attention to the on and off switch!







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November 26th 2010 13:11
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Jet-lagged and forgetful? TRUE!

November 25th 2010 20:59
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November 23rd 2010 20:14
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November 18th 2010 23:49
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