Title: Alcohol and Adolescence
1Alcohol and Adolescence
- Linda Patia Spear
- Binghamton University
- Edited by
- Susan Tapert
- Univ. of California at San Diego
2Adolescence
- Transition between childhood/immaturity and
adulthood/maturity - Timing varies (nutrition, gender, genetics,
environment) - Soft signs no events signal onset/offset
- Prototypic age ranges
- Humans 12-18 yrs (early as 8 late as 25)
- Rats 28-42 days (early as 23 late as 55)
- Primates varies with species (older juvenile
and early subadult stages) - Highly conserved physiological transitions and
behavioral characteristics
3(No Transcript)
4Gray Matter Maturation
(Gogtay et al., 2004, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.)
5Forebrain Changes in Adolescents
- Prefrontal cortex (PFC)
- Reduced excitatory drive (humans, primates,
rodents) - Decrease in PFC volume (humans rodents)
- Peak of DA innervation (humans, primates, rats)
- High DA turnover early followed by decline (rats)
- Nucleus accumbens
- Low DA turnover early followed by increase (rats)
- Hippocampus
- ? sprouting and myelination (humans, rodents)
- Amygdala
- ? activity (humans, rodents) and PFC connectivity
(rodents) - Ventral pallidum / olfactory tubercles
- ? oxytocin receptor binding (rodents)
6Functional Consequences of Adolescent Brain
Sculpting
- Relationship to hormonal reawakening of puberty?
- Support continued cognitive/emotional development
- Facilitate highly conserved adolescent behaviors
- ? social interactions with peers
- ? risk-taking, novelty-seeking, sensation seeking
7Ancillary Consequence of Adolescent Brain
Sculpting
- Altered sensitivity to alcohol/drugs
- Multiple neural systems affected by ethanol
differ ontogenetically between adolescents and
adult - Altering ethanol sensitivity and adaptations
- Possibly increasing propensity for use
8Adolescent alcohol intake
9Adolescent-Related Alterations in Ethanol
Sensitivity
- Lessened sensitivity to ethanol-induced
- Sedation
- Dysphoria
- Social inhibition
- Motor impairment
- Anxiolytic effects
- Analgesia
- Hangover effects
10Ethanol Sedation
(Silveri Spear, 1998)
11Adolescent-Related Alterations in Ethanol
Sensitivity
- Lessened sensitivity to ethanol-induced
- Sedation
- Dysphoria
- Motor impairment
- Hypothermia
- Social inhibition
- Analgesia
- Hangover effects
12Rate of Ethanol Metabolism
BEC-derived
BrEC-derived
mg/dl/hr
Age
(Silveri Spear, 2000)
13Adolescent-Related Alterations in Ethanol
Sensitivity
- Lessened sensitivity to ethanol-induced
- Sedation
- Dysphoria
- Social inhibition
- Motor impairment
- Anxiolytic effects
- Analgesia
- Hangover effects
-
- Greater sensitivity to ethanol-induced
- Impairment in LTP and spatial water maze
performance - Facilitation of social behavior
14Alcohol and Spatial Learning
Saline
1.0 g/kg EtOH
2.0 g/kg EtOH
Distance Swam to Criterion (cm ? SEM)
Adolescent
Adult
(Markwiese et al., 1998)
15Ethanol-Induced Social Facilitation
16Overall Social Activity
(Varlinskaya Spear, 2001)
17Overall Activity
(Varlinskaya Spear, 2001)
18Familiar Social Situation
Adults
Frequency / 10 min
Dose of Ethanol (g/kg)
(Varlinskaya Spear, 2002)
19Adolescent-Related Alterations in Ethanol
Sensitivity
- Greater sensitivity to ethanol-induced
- Impairment in LTP and spatial water maze
performance - Facilitation of social behavior
- Lessened sensitivity to ethanol-induced
- Sedation
- dysphoria
- Social inhibition
- Motor impairment
- Anxiolytic effects
- Analgesia
- Hangover effects
-
???? opiate NMDA-R function
GABAAR immaturity
20Acute Tolerance
(Mellanby, 1919)
21Acute Tolerance Sedation
(Silveri Spear, 1998)
22Do Human Adolescents Differ from Adults in
Alcohol Sensitivity?
- Increased sensitivity to alcohol-induced
memory impairment?
23Alcohol effects on performance of
Complex Figures Task
Verbal Learning Test
Total Correct (/- SEM)
(Acheson et al, 1998, Alcoholism Clin.Exp.Res.,
221437-1442.)
24Do Human Adolescents Differ from Adults in
Alcohol Sensitivity?
- Increased sensitivity
- to alcohol-induced memory impairment?
- to alcohol-induced social facilitation?
25Drinking for Social Facilitation
- the literature suggests that most students
drink for primarily social purposes - (Berkowitz Perkins, 1986)
- Principle components analysis of HS survey data
revealed - the most important factor across all of the
measures of alcohol abuse was drinking for social
facilitation - (Beck et al, 1993)
26Do Human Adolescents Differ from Adults in
Alcohol Sensitivity?
- Less sensitivity to motor impairing/ intoxicating
effects?
- Increased sensitivity
- to alcohol-induced memory impairment?
- to alcohol-induced social facilitation?
27Reduced Alcohol Sensitivity
- First intoxicating experience of boys
- 8-15 yrs old 0.5 ml/kg peak BAC 34-35 mg
- No significant consequences clinically,
subjectively, or on objective test - these children exhibited a smaller behavioral
change than expected for their BAL - None behaved grossly intoxicated as our
adultsubjects were - We were impressed by how little gross behavioral
change occurred in the childrenafter a dose
intoxicating in an adult population.
(Behar et al., 1983)
28Drinks/occasion and use days/month
Female
Male
Average Number
SAMHSA Survey Data (2003)
29How Might Adolescent Alcohol Sensitivity
Contribute to Problems?
- Decreased response to alcohol is a risk factor
- lower sensitivity to moderate doses of alcohol
is associated with a significant increase in the
risk of future alcoholism, perhaps through
increasing the chances that a person will drink
more heavily (Schuckit, 1994) - Lowered sensitivity to alcohol seen
- Developmentally in adolescence
- Genetically in offspring with family history of
alcoholism - As function of history/environment
- prior ethanol use (tolerance)
- early experience?
- stress during adolescence?
30How Might Adolescent Alcohol Sensitivity
Contribute to Problems?
- Alcohol-induced social facilitation may encourage
elevated drinking of adolescents
Together, may serve as permissive factors to
promote high levels of adolescent alcohol use
- Yet, adolescents more sensitive to
alcohol-induced disruptions in memory and brain
31Adverse Effects
- Impact on functioning during adolescence
- Greater sensitivity to alcohol-induced
disruptions - Memory
- Brain plasticity
- Mutual synergism alcohol ?? risk-taking
- Circumvention of normal developmental tasks?
- Increased level of stress?
- Lasting consequences
- Lasting neurocognitive consequences?
- Increased susceptibility to alcohol use
disorders?
32Lifetime Prevalence of Alcohol Dependence by Age
at First Drink
? Early alcohol use as marker vs. causality?
33Alcohol Withdrawal Spatial Skills
(Tapert Brown,
1999)
34Ethanol-Induced Brain Damage
(Crews et
al., 2000)
35Summary
- Adolescence
- Highly conserved period across species
- Numerous brain and behavioral similarities
- Adolescents exhibit
- Age-related neural alterations and enhanced acute
tolerance associated with - Less sensitivity to alcohol cues that moderate
drinking - Greater sensitivity to ethanol-induced social
stimulation and disruption in brain plasticity
and memory - Attenuated sensitivity to ethanol effects
- May permit relatively high alcohol intake in
adolescence - Potentially lead to adverse consequences during
and after adolescence