酒精和大麻的使用与大脑发育。

IF 9 1区 医学 Q1 SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Alcohol Research : Current Reviews Pub Date : 2021-09-09 eCollection Date: 2021-01-01 DOI:10.35946/arcr.v41.1.11
Briana Lees, Jennifer Debenham, Lindsay M Squeglia
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引用次数: 22

摘要

目的:酒精和大麻是青春期最常用的物质,通常是在这个敏感的神经发育时期开始使用的。这篇综述的目的是提供一个全面的概述,最近的文献集中在了解这些物质如何影响发育中的大脑。检索方法:通过在MEDLINE、Embase、PsycINFO、ProQuest Central和Web of Science中输入30个以物质使用、青春期和神经发育为重点的搜索词来识别本综述中包括的文章。如果研究在50名或更多参与者中纵向检查青少年酒精和/或大麻使用对结构或功能结局的影响,则有资格纳入研究。搜索结果:检索了700多篇文章,43项纵向研究符合纳入标准,其中18项研究侧重于酒精使用,13项研究侧重于大麻使用,12项研究侧重于酒精和大麻的共同使用。讨论和结论:现有研究表明,青春期大量饮酒和吸食大麻与大脑结构和功能的小到中度破坏以及神经认知障碍有关。酒精使用的影响包括灰质体积和皮质厚度随时间的广泛减少;脑白质生长减慢,脑完整性变差;中断的网络效率;冲动和注意力控制、学习、记忆、视觉空间处理和精神运动速度也较差。有些影响的严重程度取决于剂量。与不使用大麻的对照组相比,重度至重度大麻使用与皮质下体积减少、额顶叶皮质厚度增加、功能发育中断、执行功能和智商下降有关。总体而言,共同使用的调查结果表明,与使用大麻相比,使用酒精的影响更为明显。文献中存在一些局限性。样本量相对较小,人口统计学上同质,各研究的物质使用模式和方法存在显著异质性。需要更多的研究来澄清物质剂量和物质之间的相互作用以及社会人口和环境因素如何影响结果。正在进行的更大规模的纵向研究将有助于澄清大脑发育和物质使用之间的关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Alcohol and Cannabis Use and the Developing Brain.

Alcohol and Cannabis Use and the Developing Brain.

Purpose: Alcohol and cannabis are the most commonly used substances during adolescence and are typically initiated during this sensitive neurodevelopmental period. The aim of this review is to provide a comprehensive overview of the most recent literature focused on understanding how these substances affect the developing brain.

Search methods: Articles included in this review were identified by entering 30 search terms focused on substance use, adolescence, and neurodevelopment into MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, ProQuest Central, and Web of Science. Studies were eligible for inclusion if they longitudinally examined the effect of adolescent alcohol and/or cannabis use on structural or functional outcomes in 50 or more participants.

Search results: More than 700 articles were captured by the search, and 43 longitudinal studies met inclusion criteria, including 18 studies focused on alcohol use, 13 on cannabis use, and 12 on alcohol and cannabis co-use.

Discussion and conclusions: Existing studies suggest heavy alcohol and cannabis use during adolescence are related to small to moderate disruptions in brain structure and function, as well as neurocognitive impairment. The effects of alcohol use include widespread decreases in gray matter volume and cortical thickness across time; slowed white matter growth and poorer integrity; disrupted network efficiency; and poorer impulse and attentional control, learning, memory, visuospatial processing, and psychomotor speed. The severity of some effects is dependent on dose. Heavy to very heavy cannabis use is associated with decreased subcortical volume and increased frontoparietal cortical thickness, disrupted functional development, and decreased executive functioning and IQ compared to non-using controls. Overall, co-use findings suggest more pronounced effects related to alcohol use than to cannabis use. Several limitations exist in the literature. Sample sizes are relatively small and demographically homogenous, with significant heterogeneity in substance use patterns and methodologies across studies. More research is needed to clarify how substance dosing and interactions between substances, as well as sociodemographic and environmental factors, affect outcomes. Larger longitudinal studies, already underway, will help clarify the relationship between brain development and substance use.

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来源期刊
自引率
1.10%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: Alcohol Research: Current Reviews (ARCR) is an open-access, peer-reviewed journal published by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) at the National Institutes of Health. Starting from 2020, ARCR follows a continuous, rolling publication model, releasing one virtual issue per yearly volume. The journal offers free online access to its articles without subscription or pay-per-view fees. Readers can explore the content of the current volume, and past volumes are accessible in the journal's archive. ARCR's content, including previous titles, is indexed in PubMed, PsycINFO, Scopus, and Web of Science.
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