• Narconon Africa

    Many Faces. One Workable Solution.

  • Alcohol and Drugs: Their Damaging Effects on Your Brain

    Exposing the many ways drug and alcohol abuse takes a terrible toll on our brains.

    If you’re old enough, you might remember the anti-drug ads of the 1980s: “This is your brain on drugs. Any questions?” Those words were accompanied by the image of an egg frying on a very hot cast-iron pan. That refrain was repeated for many years afterwards. How true was it? Are drugs harmful to the physical structure and function of the human brain? Fortunately, there is plenty of information available on this subject.

     

    Drugs of Abuse and Their Effects

    Alcohol

    This is the drug that’s available in every state in the country. It’s legal to sell it to 21-year-olds almost everywhere in the U.S. Alcohol abuse at a young age can alter the development of the brain, resulting in lasting changes in its function.

    Overdoses of alcohol cause some areas of the brain to shut down, resulting in depressed breathing function and slow heart rate. An overdose can also lead to permanent brain damage due to the destruction of brain cells. Alcohol overdoses are commonly called alcohol poisoning and can result in death. The person poisoned by alcohol may try to vomit but then inhale the vomited material, which then causes suffocation. Long-term alcohol abuse can cause a form of encephalopathy (brain disease) that results in the inability to control the movement of the eyes, poor coordination and balance, confusion, and dementia. If not treated early, the damage to the brain can become permanent.

    Alcohol abuse among youth can have particularly damaging effects. Researchers have learned that heavy abuse of alcohol at a young age changes the connections between different parts of the brain. This can weaken areas involved in emotional and cognitive functioning. Early alcohol abuse can even bring about a reduction in the size of some parts of a young person’s developing brain.

    Benzodiazepines

    Changes to the brain after misusing benzodiazepines like Xanax or Valium can result in long-lasting symptoms like these:

    Low energy

    Memory loss

    Difficulty focusing

    Anxiety

    Insomnia

    Sensitivity to light and sounds

    Body pain

    Muscle weakness

    These symptoms may last for years after misuse of benzodiazepines stops. Medical researchers have grouped these and other symptoms under one heading: benzodiazepine-induced neurological dysfunction or BIND.

    Cannabis/Marijuana

    When cannabis is used by a pregnant woman, studies indicate that their children could suffer from higher problems related to attention, memory, problem-solving skills, and behavior. Youth who use cannabis are likely to have poorer performance in school and more difficulty remembering. One long-term study revealed that those who used cannabis over a long period of time had smaller hippocampi than those who did not. The hippocampus is a part of the brain associated with learning and memory.

    Cocaine

    A recent study of the impact of cocaine addiction on the brain showed that those addicted to this drug had a reduced amount of gray matter in the brain. This gray matter forms the outer layer of the brain and is thought to control movement, memory, and emotions. Reduced gray matter appeared to result from an atrophy of these tissues. Cocaine-addicted individuals also had a higher brain age than non-users, based on each group’s performance on tests. Cocaine causes these effects because of its ability to cause inflammation, and its toxicity to nerve tissues.

    Another possible type of brain injury resulting from cocaine use is ischemic stroke, a type of stroke resulting from oxygen being cut off from some part of the brain. One study found that young people who had used cocaine in the last 24 hours had a 6.4-fold risk of ischemic stroke.

    Hallucinogens

    It is well known that hallucinogens have a profound effect on the function of the brain, leading to hallucinations and changes in perceptions of colors, time, self, and thought processes. They may also have harmful effects on brain tissue itself. One study found that those who regularly used ayahuasca, a South American herb, experienced a thinning of the part of the brain associated with remembering the past and planning the future.

    The powerful hallucinogen phencyclidine, or PCP, is known to have a directly damaging effect on the brain, including the potential for stroke.

    Inhalants

    Inhalant abuse involves the inhalation of any of hundreds of toxic household or industrial chemicals for the purpose of becoming intoxicated. Inhalant abuse can become addictive, and it can also be deadly, even the first time an inhalant is abused.

    Effects of inhalant abuse include:

    Dizziness

    Slowed mental and physical functions

    Blurred vision

    Poor muscle control

    Headache

    Seizures

    Coma

    Involuntary and rapid movement of the eyes

    Chronic use of these substances can result in encephalopathy or brain damage and disease.


    Ketamine

    Long-term abuse of this drug is associated with reduced volume of the gray matter of the brain. This can happen when brain cells die. Reduced volume of gray matter is associated with problems with language, focus, reasoning, and motor skills. The white matter that constitutes the inner part of the brain also loses its integrity. This part of the brain is essential for rapid exchange and communication between different parts of the brain. Also damaged is your brain’s connection with the thalamus which relays signals about your movements and senses to your brain. Poor communication between the thalamus and your brain can affect your sleep, consciousness, learning, and memory.

    MDMA

    MDMA is better known as ecstasy or Molly. It is extremely common in nightclubs and dance venues, and at outdoor music festivals. In addition to creating euphoria, it creates dramatic changes to sensory messages. In the brain, it creates neurotoxins, or substances that are poisonous to brain and nervous system tissue. As it is a stimulant, an ischemic (lack of blood supply) stroke is more likely than a hemorrhage in the brain. Death of brain tissue can result from either strokes or neurotoxins.

    Methamphetamine

    Meth is a very powerful synthetic stimulant. It causes a fast increase in heart rate and blood pressure. These changes can be very hard on the brain. A not-possible result is a cerebral hemorrhage, a type of stroke resulting from bleeding in the brain. The risk of this type of hemorrhage is greater among methamphetamine users. Coma and death can result.

    Opioids

    Opioid drugs like heroin, morphine, fentanyl, oxycodone, and others depress breathing, which can mean the brain does not receive enough oxygen, resulting in a condition called hypoxia. When hypoxia is severe enough, death results. Hypoxia can also result in short- and long-term neurological effects, such as coma or permanent brain damage.

    Cognitive, memory and motor impairments may result from opioid overdoses that are survived and can last for months. Symptoms of this damage include:

    Amnesia

    Loss of focus

    Forgetfulness

    Abnormal gait

    Incontinence

    Fentanyl, a synthetic opioid far more powerful than morphine or heroin, has been found to have particularly dangerous effects on the brain. Researchers found that fentanyl’s effect on the brain results in depression of the breathing far faster than it changes a person’s alertness. For that reason, fentanyl can cause nearly instant overdose deaths. The drug user may die before they are even aware of a problem.

    Protect Your Brain; Avoid Drug Abuse

    When people go bicycling, skateboarding, or engage in other active sports, most wear helmets to protect their heads, particularly their brains. Paradoxically, far too many people think nothing of loading up on alcohol, abusing benzodiazepines or cocaine, or using inhalants. They probably don’t know that they are risking everything, just like a person who goes through a car crash or other type of brain trauma. When a brain is permanently damaged, a person’s life may be changed forever.

    Anyone who uses drugs is risking the function and health of their brain. If you or someone you care about is addicted, it’s vital to seek drug rehabilitation at the first possible moment to protect the health of the brain and life. The only safety is in sobriety. Seek help today and safeguard your future. Visit our page today at https://www.narcononafrica.org.za/

    There are no published blog posts yet.