U.S. scientists warn that exposure to methamphetamine in young adults leads to long-term behavioral consequences.
The consequences include age-related brain degeneration when people grow older, new animal research suggests.
The new work examines the idea that methamphetamine puts young users at risk of developing deficits later in life that are symptomatic of Parkinson's disease in individuals with depletion of glial derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF), a protein that protects and repairs dopamine in areas of the brain related to movement control. Loss of nerve cells that produce dopamine is a major factor in the disease.
In their work, published in the August 15 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience, researchers at the Medical University of South Carolina examined the role of GDNF in mice. At 2.5 months of age, the equivalent of adolescence in humans, mice with a partial GDNF gene deletion were compared to mice without the gene deletion. Both were given either methamphetamine or saline injections four times over an eight-hour period.
The researchers discovered that the effects of this methamphetamine binge were exacerbated in the mice with the GDNF deletion. In addition, at 12 months, the GDNF-depleted mice moved significantly less than genetically normal mice treated with methamphetamine.
Methamphetamine intoxication in any young adult may have deleterious consequences later in life, although they may not be apparent until many decades after the exposure, says lead researcher Jacqueline McGinty, PhD.
These studies speak directly to the possibility of long-term public health consequences resulting from the current epidemic of methamphetamine abuse among young adults, he says.
The emergence of behavioral deficits in animals months after methamphetamine discontinuation may be relevant to human methamphetamine abusers, says Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute for Drug Abuse.
"It suggests that even though their current use may not result in deficits, as they age these deficits will become manifest," Volkow says.
Future studies might involve identifying the reasons for increased vulnerability to methamphetamine in GDNF-depleted mice in order to help minimize the harm methamphetamine causes to the brain.
Source: Xinhua
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