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Early puberty in boys increases lifelong addiction risk, substance abuse problems

Asian News International | ByAsian News International, Washington D.c.
Jul 17, 2018 10:44 AM IST

Early doses of testosterone speed the development of certain areas of the brain that heighten reward-seeking behaviour.

A new study suggests that boys experiencing early puberty are at a higher risk for substance use than those who attain puberty later.

Half of the boys in the study came from families with fathers who had problems with substance use disorders, a rate far higher than the average population.(Shutterstock)
Half of the boys in the study came from families with fathers who had problems with substance use disorders, a rate far higher than the average population.(Shutterstock)

Researchers at Purdue University suggest that brain-related testosterone activity contributes to an increased risk of substance use more than an earlier appearance of maturity and accompanying social pressures in early pubescent boys.

“The earlier your first sip of alcohol or that you try other kinds of drugs, the more likely you are to go on to develop lifelong addiction and problems with substance use. A good way to prevent long-term substance use problems is to delay that onset as long as possible,” said Kristine Marceau, an assistant professor.

Early doses of testosterone speed the development of certain areas of the brain that heighten reward-seeking behaviour before the brain develops those parts involved in decision-making and impulse control. This mismatch puts youth at risk of engaging in substance use before time.

Understanding the cause for increased substance use behaviour in early adolescents is necessary for developing prevention strategies that protect for the avoidance of lifelong problems with addiction.

Half of the boys in the study came from families with fathers who had problems with substance use disorders, a rate far higher than the average population. Boys matriculated into the study starting at age 11. Researchers followed the boy’s relationship with substance use for ten different drugs at age 16 until the age of 30. Nurses took observational measures of physical signs of puberty and hormone concentrations.

Testosterone and its initial timing rather than visible puberty-related changes and the pace at which boys progressed through puberty were identified as the culprit for the increased substance use behaviour. The findings appeared in the Journal of Child Development.

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