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Thursday 9 August 2012

Brain Scans Show Teen Drinking Impairs Brain Efficiency

Brain Scans Show Teen Drinking Impairs Brain Efficiency:
Brain Scans Show Teen Drinking Impairs Brain EfficiencyNew research suggests brains scans can identify patterns of brain activity that may predict if a teen will develop into a problem drinker.
The study also confirms that heavy drinking affects a teenagers’ developing brain.
Using special MRI scans, researchers looked at forty 12- to 16-year-olds who had not started drinking yet, then followed them for about three years and scanned them again.
Researchers discovered that half of the teens started to drink alcohol fairly heavily during this interval.
Investigators also found that kids who had initially showed less activation in certain brain areas were at greater risk for becoming heavy drinkers in the next three years.
However, once the teens started drinking, their brain activity looked like the heavy drinkers’ in the other studies — that is, their brains showed more activity as they tried to perform memory tests.
“That’s the opposite of what you’d expect, because their brains should be getting more efficient as they get older,” said lead researcher Lindsay M. Squeglia, Ph.D., of the University of California, San Diego.
Researchers say an operational definition of heavy drinking typically included episodes of having four or more drinks on an occasion for females and five or more drinks for males.
The findings add to evidence that heavy drinking has consequences for teenagers’ developing brains. But they also add a new layer: There may be brain activity patterns that predict which kids are at increased risk for heavy drinking.
“It’s interesting because it suggests there might be some pre-existing vulnerability,” Squeglia said.
Researchers say they are not advocating for teens to receive MRIs to determine their risk of excessive alcohol consumption. But the findings do give clues into the biological origins of kids’ problem drinking.
Experts say the findings suggest that heavy drinking may affect young people’s brains right at the time when they need to be working efficiently.
“You’re learning to drive, you’re getting ready for college. This is a really important time of your life for cognitive development,” Squeglia said.
She noted that all of the study participants were healthy, well-functioning kids. It’s possible that teens with certain disorders — like depression or ADHD — might show greater effects from heavy drinking.
Source: Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs

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