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A `forest-fire of brain damage'
NY TIMES NEWS SERVICE
, New York
Wednesday, Jul 21, 2004,Page 16
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According to the US Drug Enforcement
Administration, small methamphetamine laboratories, known as
mom-and-pop labs, are now being found in every state in the eastern
parts of the US, from upstate New York to Florida.
PHOTO: NY TIMES
| People who do not want to wait for old age
to shrink their brains and bring on memory loss now have a quicker
alternative -- abuse methamphetamine for a decade or so and watch the
brain cells vanish into the night.
The first high-resolution MRI study of methamphetamine addicts shows "a
forest fire of brain damage," said Dr. Paul Thompson, an expert on
brain mapping at the University of California, Los Angeles. "We
expected some brain changes but didn't expect so much tissue to be
destroyed."
The image, published in the June 30 issue of The Journal of Neuroscience , shows the brain's surface and deeper limbic system. Red areas show the greatest tissue loss.
The limbic region, involved in drug craving, reward, mood and emotion,
lost 11 percent of its tissue. "The cells are dead and gone," Thompson
said. Addicts were depressed, anxious and unable to concentrate.
The brain's center for making new memories, the hippocampus, lost 8
percent of its tissue, comparable to the brain deficits in early
Alzheimer's. The methamphetamine addicts fared significantly worse on
memory tests than healthy people the same age.
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Evidence photos from a methamphetamine arrest by the Watagua County Sheriff Department in North Carolina.
PHOTO: NY TIMES
| The study examined 22 people in their 30s
who had used methamphetamine for 10 years, mostly by smoking it, and 21
controls matched for age. On average, the addicts used an average of
four grams a week and said they had been high on 19 of the 30 days
before the study began.
Methamphetamine is an addictive stimulant made in clandestine
laboratories nationwide. When taken by mouth, snorted, injected or
smoked, it produces intense pleasure by releasing the brain's reward
chemical, dopamine.
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Evidence photos from a methamphetamine arrest by the Watagua County Sheriff Department in North Carolina.
PHOTO: NY TIMES
| With chronic use, the brains that
overstimulate dopamine and another brain chemical, serotonin, are
permanently compromised.
The study held one other surprise, Thompson said. White matter,
composed of nerve fibers that connect different areas, was severely
inflamed, making the addicts' brains 10 percent larger than normal.
"This was shocking," he said. But there was one piece of good news. The
white matter was not dead. With abstinence, it might recover.
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