By
Nicole Martins, WellFlorida Council Intern
The
effects of tobacco addiction are inherently different on the adolescent brain
as compared to adults. This was the focus of the presentation by Daniel Logan,
MD, at the 6th Annual Rural Tobacco Summit on “Addiction: Tobacco
& E-Cigarettes.” Logan, an assistant professor at the University of Florida
Department of Psychiatry, discussed distinctive mental characteristics of teenage
smokers.
The
adolescent brain is maturing until about the age of 25. During this time,
long-term connections and mental processes are being strengthened. When a
teenager consumes tobacco there is an increase in nicotine receptors greater
than that seen in adults because the teen brain is not yet fully developed. The
increase also lasts longer in teens than in adults. This process quickly
habituates the individual to smoking and has long-term effects on addictive and
cognitive behavior.
Smoking
is unique, Logan said, because it is simply a delivery system for the toxin:
nicotine. Nicotine’s toxic properties reinforce “reward pathways” in the brain,
including the release of dopamine, that lead to major dependence in
adolescents. Teen smokers show signs of nicotine dependence before becoming
daily smokers and they are more likely to be heavy smokers than those who are
exposed to tobacco after the age of 18.
“Over 90
percent of lifetime smokers started before age 18,” Logan said. “If we can
delay initial exposure before the age of 25, the likelihood of lifetime
addiction diminishes significantly.”
The
pathways are also intensified with vaping, the use of personal vaporizers
commonly known as “e-cigarettes,” which is often considered a harmless
alternative to smoking.
“You’re
simply reinforcing the behavior,” Logan said. “If you normalize the behavior,
it’s not surprising that smoking becomes more popular.”
Vaping
imitates tobacco-smoking behavior and increases the likelihood of initial teen
exposure and addiction to tobacco. Logan’s presentation emphasized that
although vaping is the “lesser evil” of tobacco use, it should not be mistaken
as a “safe” substitution or as quitting.
The summit, sponsored by SuwanneeRiver AHEC, LakeShore Hospital and North
Central Florida Cancer Control Collaborative(NCFCCC), was held in April 2014. Oversight and
leadership of NCFCCC is provided by WellFlorida Council.
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