PAPER: Nicotine on adolescent brains can lead to cognitive impairments in later life..

February 27, 2011 - Smoking can cause permanent damage to adolescent’s developing brains, according to VU university researchers in the latest issue of Nature Neuroscience magazine.

PAPER: Lasting synaptic changes underlie attention deficits caused by nicotine exposure during adolescence, Danielle S Counotte, Natalia A Goriounova, Ka Wan Li, Maarten Loos, Roel C van der Schors, Dustin Schetters, Anton N M Schoffelmeer, August B Smit, Huibert D Mansvelder, Tommy Pattij & Sabine Spijker, Nature Neuroscience - Published online 20 February 2011, ABSTRACT/FULL TEXT..

A directly related news brief:
Nicotine has a negative impact on the developing adolescent brain..

Smoking can cause permanent damage to adolescent’s developing brains, according to VU university researchers in the latest issue of Nature Neuroscience magazine. It is the first time that the effect of nicotine on adolescent brains has been researched and the results show smoking can ‘lead to cognitive impairments in later life’. This could mean that people who start smoking at a young age could have ‘lasting attentional disturbances’, the researchers said.

The team carried out their experiments on young rats but say the effect can be translated to humans because of the similarities between the rat and human brains. The rats which had been given nicotine while adolescents performed between 5% and 10% worse than a control group in tests at a later age. But rats given nicotine as adults showed no difference in performance.

‘Translating this to the human situation, we are talking about youngsters who start smoking between the ages of 12 and 16,’ researcher Sabine Spijker told the Volkskrant. ‘They will become fine workers when they get older, but as soon as things get difficult or too much is asked of them, they drop out more quickly than others. Then they cannot stay focused.’

Nicotine also makes young rats more impulsive.

Reference: Smoking can damage teenage brains permanently: VU research, DutchNews.nl, 2/21/2011

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