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Early Teen Drug Use Changes Brain Structure Before Age 15

Altered Brain Development May Set Path to Addiction

Substance use before age 15 fundamentally changes brain structure, with research on 9,804 children showing specific patterns of damage. Early users display larger overall brain volume but dangerously thinner prefrontal cortex – the region critical for decision-making and impulse control.

Washington University researchers found these brain differences appeared in many children before they started using substances, suggesting both pre-existing vulnerabilities and early effects of substance use. While adult substance users typically show decreased brain volume, young users displayed larger brain volumes and surface areas, pointing to disrupted development patterns.

Most concerning, the prefrontal cortex was thinner, while temporal, occipital, and parietal regions were thicker in early substance users. This abnormal pattern suggests substance use during critical developmental periods may alter the brain’s natural maturation process.

These findings demonstrate how early substance exposure can derail normal brain development, emphasizing the urgent need for prevention before age 15. The research provides crucial evidence for strengthening youth substance use prevention and early intervention programs.

Reference: Miller AP, Baranger DAA, Paul SE, et al. Neuroanatomical variability and substance use initiation in late childhood and early adolescence. JAMA Netw Open. 2024;7(12):e2452027.

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