Originally published November 15, 2010 at 7:55 PM | Page modified November 16, 2010 at 7:30 AM
Comments (0)
E-mail article
Print
Share
Early use of pot may change the brain
Cognitive ability is poorer among those who start smoking young.
Bloomberg News
Smoking marijuana regularly before the age of 16 causes changes in the brain that can impair a young person's ability to focus, learn from mistakes and think abstractly, according to a Harvard study.
On brain scans, the youngest pot smokers showed activation in regions of the brain that was not seen in those who started smoking after age 16, suggesting early exposure causes neural changes, researchers at Harvard-affiliated McLean Hospital found. Early and habitual users performed more poorly on tests of cognitive functions, including mental flexibility.
Research on how marijuana changes a developing brain is important as it's the most frequently used illegal drug in the U.S., said study author Staci Gruber, director of the neuroimaging center at McLean Hospital in Belmont, Mass.
Almost 16 percent of eighth-graders have tried marijuana, and that number rises to 42 percent by 12th grade, a 2009 study from the National Institute on Drug Abuse found.
Early chronic users "make repetitive incorrect responses despite the fact I'm telling them they're wrong," said Gruber, also an assistant professor of psychology at Harvard University. "That's called 'cognitive inflexibility,' and you see it in babies."
The research, presented Monday at the Society for Neuroscience's meeting in San Diego, also found that the group that started earlier smoked more pot more often than those who started later. People who began smoking before age 16 had 25.1 smokes a week, compared with 12.1 in those who began later. The first group smoked almost three times as many grams a week, Gruber said.
The study compared 33 marijuana smokers to 26 healthy controls. Participants were given tests to measure executive function, a term for brain processes responsible for abilities and behaviors involving abstract thinking, decision making, cognitive flexibility and correcting mistakes.
The results showed those who started using pot before age 16 made twice as many mistakes on tests of executive function as those who began later. The research didn't examine those people who had started smoking early and stopped, although those people begin to look more like nonsmokers in other studies, Gruber said.
Teens' video games
not big health threat
HARTFORD, Conn. — The good news is that not only do video games pose little in the way of health hazards for most teens, they're even linked to lower smoking.
The bad news is that a small group of adolescents are "problem gamers," and that can lead to trouble.
![]()
So says a new study out of Yale, published Monday in the journal Pediatrics. The study has been called one of the most comprehensive examinations of video games' effect on adolescents' health.
Of the 4,028 surveyed, 51 percent played video games (76.3 percent male, 29.2 female). The researchers — led by Rani Desai, associate professor of psychiatry and epidemiology at Yale — believe video games pose little concern for adolescents. Among boys, video games are even linked to a lower chance of taking up smoking.
However, a small group of those surveyed (close to 5 percent) reported that they have trouble cutting back on their playing, and feel tense if they don't play. It's among this group that problems emerge. Cigarette smoking, drug use, depression and serious fights were found to be more common in this group, for both boys and girls.
The Hartford Courant
On the left hand, answers aren't easy
Getting active outside can bring sunshine to your winter
How to encourage healthy computing
Obese people asked to eat fast food for health study
Charlie Sheen claims AA has a 5 percent success rate — is he right?

Entertainment | Top Video | World | Offbeat Video | Sci-Tech
nwautos
(Daihatsu) Daihatsu FC Sho Case This futuristic four-seater debuted at the Tokyo auto show in December. Its seats can fold flat into the floor and th...
Post a comment
- Madrona dad killed by stray bullet as he drove through Central Area
- SPU surprises neighbors with sale of Queen Anne rec property
- Beer-drinking bridge builders will get training from a counselor
- Matt Flynn has good day in Seahawks' 3-way QB competition
- Boy's pat on president's head captured for history
- Why dealing for Kellen Winslow makes sense for Seahawks | Steve Kelley
- Police arrest New Jersey man who confessed to killing Etan Patz
- Amazon addresses criticism at meeting
- Driver fatally shot in Central Area
- Facebook messages trigger melee at Whitman Middle School
- Opponents of gay-marriage law say they have enough signatures
857 - Mariners look to get back on winning track against Angels
457 - Madrona dad killed by stray bullet as he drove through Central Area
249 - Komen controversy hurting Race for the Cure
215 - Typical CEO made $9.6M last year, AP study finds
148 - Sources: DOJ sends letters to city blasting police reform efforts
138 - Fact check: Ad exaggerates Obama's debt
96 - Driver caught in crossfire, fatally shot in Central Area
89 - It's been great; see you soon in my new columns
70 - Eric Wedge not happy with Mariners after 14-strikeout perfromance versus Dan Haren
60
- Madrona dad killed by stray bullet as he drove through Central Area
- Dig into colorful history at Oregon's John Day Fossil Beds
- Get a sitter — please — for these 10 great date-night restaurants | All You Can Eat
- SPU surprises neighbors with sale of Queen Anne rec property
- Beer-drinking bridge builders will get training from a counselor
- Zumiez rebounds from recession better than most
- Boy's pat on president's head captured for history
- Driver fatally shot in Central Area
- Downtown building fetches $55M, thanks to Amazon effect
- Gates Foundation grants give local groups a boost








News where, when and how you want it
All newsletters Privacy statement