AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates the impact of alcohol, cannabis, and nicotine use on hippocampal volume in young adults, focusing on differences between sexes and controlling for familial risk factors through a cotwin control design.
  • - Results indicate that greater substance use correlates with reduced hippocampal volume in women but not in men, with significant findings for alcohol, cannabis, and nicotine, although cannabis effects were not statistically significant.
  • - The findings suggest that women may be at a higher risk for adverse effects on their developing hippocampus due to substance exposure, emphasizing the role of smoking and, to a lesser extent, drinking as factors contributing to hippocampal volume reductions.

Article Abstract

Background: Alcohol, cannabis, and nicotine use are highly comorbid and alarmingly prevalent in young adults. The hippocampus may be particularly sensitive to substance exposure. This remains largely untested in humans and familial risk may confound exposure effects. We extend prior work on alcohol and hippocampal volume in women by testing common and unique substance use effects and the potential moderating role of sex on hippocampal volume during emerging adulthood. A quasi-experimental cotwin control (CTC) design was used to separate familial risk from exposure consequences.

Methods: In a population-based sample of 435 24-year-old same-sex twins (58% women), dimensional measures (e.g. frequency, amount) of alcohol, cannabis, and nicotine use across emerging adulthood were assessed. Hippocampal volume was assessed using MRI.

Results: Greater substance use was significantly associated with lower hippocampal volume for women but not men. The same pattern was observed for alcohol, cannabis, and nicotine. CTC analyses provided evidence that hippocampal effects likely reflected familial risk and the consequence of substance use in general and alcohol and nicotine in particular; cannabis effects were in the expected direction but not significant. Within-pair mediation analyses suggested that the effect of alcohol use on the hippocampus may reflect, in part, comorbid nicotine use.

Conclusions: The observed hippocampal volume deviations in women likely reflected substance-related premorbid familial risk and the consequences of smoking and, to a lesser degree, drinking. Findings contribute to a growing body of work suggesting heightened risk among women toward experiencing deleterious effects of substance exposure on the still-developing young adult hippocampus.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10123841PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0033291721004682DOI Listing

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