It is typical for a minor to consume more on each drinking occasion than an adult would (Centers for Disease Control, 2016). This means that when minors drink, it is common for them to drink past the legal limit to the point of impairment. This is due to the fact that adolescents are biologically predisposed to engage in risk- taking behaviors.
In an adolescent’s brain, the prefrontal region (influences behavior) which is not fully matured is hijacked, so to speak, by the limbic system (reward center) which is more mature (Bava & Susan, 2010, p.406). Because of this, an adolescent is likely to throw reasoning out the door and focus more on the pleasure they will receive from engaging in risky behaviors. They are not thinking about the potential long-term consequences but rather the immediate benefits they will receive. This phenomenon is specific to adolescents, because children are immature in both regions whereas adults are mature in both regions (Bava & Tapert, 2010, p.406)
But there are also physiological and neurocognitive effects of alcohol throughout the lifespan, even in adulthood. Adolescents still have essential ongoing brain development, with the brain not fully developing until the mid to late twenties. Since alcohol affects brain functioning, consuming alcohol can have detrimental effects on adolescents. They are vulnerable to the exposure of neurotoxins, because of the cognitive development during this time in their lives (Bava & Tapert, 2010, p. 399).The prefrontal, hippocampus and cerebellum components are the most apparently compromised in the brain during drug use (Bava & Tapert, 2010, p 407). These are the parts of the brain that control decision making, memory, and attention .
One study followed adolescents who did not drink alcohol and those that starting binge drinking, with clear neurodevelopmental differences in each group. It was evident that drinking reduced the cortical thickness and white matter (Luciana, Collins, Muetzel, Lim, 2013, p. 350). In the two year period that the study took place, substance users had a great decrease in their cortical thickness. Located in the middle frontal gyrus in the right hemisphere of the brain (Luciana et al., 2013, p.349-350). This part of the brain lowers inhibition and manages memory.
Alcohol exposure changes the structures and functions for children for those exposed prenatally. With the same effects on adolescents who have a substance use disorder (Luciana et al., 2013, p. 351).Chronic use will lead to loss of grey and white matter, which are both vital to brain functioning (Bava & Tapert, 2013, p. 399).
Adolescents are susceptible to these effects. Because of the rate they are using and the developmental processes that are happening during this stage in their life. There are not only physical changes going on within the brain when alcohol is consumed. But also impaired functioning that results from these changes.
Bava, S., Tapert, S.(2010). Adolescent brain development and the risk for alcohol and other drug
problems. Neuropsychology Review, 20, 398-413.
Centers for Disease Control. Fact Sheets- Underage Drinking.
http://www.cdc.gov/alcohol/fact-sheets/underage-drinking.htm. Retrieved: January 2016
Luciana, M., Collins, P., Muetzel, R., Lim, K. (2013). Effects of alcohol use initiation on brain
structure in typically developing adolescents. The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, 39, 345-355.
The parenting manual offering solutions to the modern-day challenges families face. From Pre-K
through College stay up to date on the modern day issues families face.
MASK Mothers Awareness on School-age Kids offers parenting solutions for today’s families. MASK tackles important topics – from drugs and alcohol to bullying and Internet safety -and gives students, parents and the community the knowledge and tools to manage these potential challenges.
Subscribe today! https://www.maskmatters.org/product/mask-the-magazine/
Download and share the MASKmatters app now! Made for children, parents, teachers and in Spanish.
Have solutions at your fingertips
Available free on apple and google play links below
Apple https://apps.apple.com/us/app/maskmatters/id1482305692
Google Play
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.maskmatters.maskmattersapp&hl=en_US&gl=US