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THE EDUCATOR - Summer 2005
One Hit of Crystal
Meth Causes Birth Defects, Affects Fetuses at All Stages of Development
Adapted from a news release issued by University
of Toronto
A single prenatal dose of methamphetamine -- commonly known
as speed -- may be enough to cause long-term neurodevelopmental problems
in babies, say University of Toronto researchers.
In research published in the August issue of Free Radical
Biology and Medicine, U of T pharmacy and pharmacology professor Peter Wells
and his colleagues determined that exposing pregnant mice only once to methamphetamine
led to delivery of offspring with long-term neurodevelopmental problems,
including reduced motor co-ordination. Methamphetamine is a potent and addictive
stimulant.
"We've known for a while that meth abuse during pregnancy is associated
with low birth weight, cleft palates and other malformations but this is
the first research demonstrating that even a single exposure can cause long-term
damage," says Wells. "It's pretty remarkable that a single low dose can
have such an effect.
"It's an important finding, given the increasing use
of club drugs among women of childbearing age. It has clinical implications,
because it shows that the fetus is exquisitely sensitive."
The developing fetus appears to be vulnerable to DNA damage from methamphetamine
exposure because it hasn't yet developed the enzymes that protect it against
free radicals -- highly activated, destructive oxygen molecules that have
been implicated in cancer and neurodegenerative diseases, says Wells. This
vulnerability lasts from the embryonic stage through the later fetal period,
times when organ structures and mental functions develop.
"People usually think the last trimester of pregnancy is when developing
brain function is most susceptible to damage, but in this case the brain
is also affected by methamphetamine even in the earlier embryonic period," says
Wells.
Wells' next step will be to study women and their babies who have been
exposed to drugs like methamphetamine that enhance free radical formation
to see if the human damage is consistent with his mouse findings. He will
also try to determine whether the methamphetamine causes other lasting damage
in mice, such as impacts on learning and memory.
"Methamphetamine has very different toxic effects in the fetal brain than
in adult mice, which surprised me," says Wells. "In adults, you can see
actual structural degeneration of the brain."
U of T doctoral candidates Winnie Jeng and Andrea Wong
and undergraduate Ryan Ting-A-Kee were also involved in this study. The
research was supported by a grant from the Canadian Institutes of Health
Research (CIHR). The doctoral candidates received awards from the CIHR/Rx&D
Health Research Foundation, the American Society of Toxicology and the
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2005/04/050727063759.htm
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