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Caffeine is the most widely used stimulant in the world,
consumed in coffee, tea and soft drinks by hundreds of
millions of people to get started in the morning and as
a pick-me-up during the day. That people like the jolt
they get from caffeine is no secret, but what caffeine
does in the brain has been unknown.
Now a team of Austrian researchers using advanced brain
imaging technology has discovered that caffeine makes
people more alert by perking up part of the brain
involved in short-term memory, the kind that helps focus
attention on the tasks at hand.
And Americans seem most in need of concentrating their
thoughts, since their average daily consumption of 236
milligrams of caffeine, equivalent to more than 4.5 cups
of coffee, is three times the world average.
"Almost all of us drink coffee or something with
caffeine in it and we know why, because we want to be
more awake or feel better," said Dr.
Florian Koppelstaetter of the Medical University
Innsbruck in Austria.
"We wanted to know what effect one to two cups of coffee
would have on short-term memory."
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Reporting Wednesday at the Radiological
Society of North America meeting in McCormick
Place, Koppelstaetter said functional magnetic
resonance imaging, or fMRI, was used to measure
brain function in 15 healthy volunteers before
and after drinking coffee. |
The findings revealed increased activity in
the frontal lobe, where working memory is
centered, and the anterior cingulum, which
controls attention, in volunteers after they
consumed 100 milligrams of caffeine, the
equivalent of about two cups of coffee. These
areas showed no increased activity when the
subjects drank the same fluid without caffeine. |
"The increased activity means you are more
able to focus,"
Koppelstaetter said. "You have more attention
and your task management is better." |
Short-term memory lasts about 30 to 45
seconds and stores a small amount of information
for a limited amount of time. It's the kind of
memory used to look up a telephone number and
remember it long enough to dial it. Long-term
memory, on the other hand, stores an unlimited
amount of information for an unlimited amount of
time. |
"What is exciting is that by means of MRI we
are able to see that caffeine exerts increases
in neuronal activity in distinct parts of the
brain going along with changes in behavior,"
Koppelstaetter said.
Study links pot, schizophrenia
In another report presented at the meeting,
researchers from New York's Albert Einstein
Medical School found that marijuana smoking may
increase the risk of schizophrenia in people who
have a genetic susceptibility to the disease.
Using a special version of MRI technology called
diffusion tensor imaging, or DTI, Drs. Manzar
Ashtari and Sanjiv Kumra found that marijuana
smokers had brain abnormalities similar to those
of schizophrenics. The abnormalities occurred in
a bundle of fibers called the arcuate fasciculus,
which connects Broca's area in the left frontal
lobe with Wernicke's area in the left temporal
lobe, a fiber pathway linked to higher aspects
of language and auditory functions.
The fibers in the arcuate fasciculus bundle are
among the last parts of the brain to be formed
during adolescence. DTI images, which can peer
deep into the brain to reveal connections
between neurons, found that connections in the
arcuate fasciculus bundle were forming
abnormally in marijuana smokers. These are the
same fibers that the researchers showed were
abnormal in schizophrenics. |
The researchers studied normal youngsters in
late adolescence who didn't smoke marijuana,
adolescents who smoked marijuana, adolescents
who had schizophrenia and adolescent
schizophrenics who smoked marijuana. The
formation of the arcuate fasciculus bundle
appeared normal in the adolescents who didn't
smoke and showed some signs of abnormalities in
those who did. The abnormalities were more
pronounced in schizophrenics who didn't smoke
marijuana and were the most pronounced in those
who did.
Other findings agree
Ashtari said the Albert Einstein team undertook
the study because of population studies showing
an association between marijuana smoking and
schizophrenia. The latest of these studies,
reported in the May issue of the Journal of
Addiction, involved 1,000 people followed for 25
years.
It showed that the heaviest marijuana use was
associated with a higher risk of schizophrenia
and that schizophrenics who smoked marijuana had
more relapses than schizophrenics who didn't
smoke.
"We're not saying that anybody who smokes
marijuana is going to get schizophrenia,"
Ashtari said. "However, we are saying that if
you are genetically predisposed, because your
uncle or aunt or father or somebody has
schizophrenia in your family, then marijuana
increases your risk of contracting the disease." |
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