Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

UWM joining childhood brain study

One of 21 sites across country to participat­e

- KAREN HERZOG

Researcher­s from the University of WisconsinM­ilwaukee are joining what’s being called the largest long-term study of childhood brain developmen­t and health in the United States.

UWM is one of 21 sites across the country that will recruit children ages 9 and 10 to study over the next decade as part of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Developmen­t (ABCD) Study by the National Institutes of Health.

The study is expected to follow more than 10,000 children through the teen years and into early adulthood to gather an unpreceden­ted amount of detailed informatio­n about a period when the brain changes dramatical­ly and the risk is highest for substance abuse and other behavioral disorders to begin.

Scientists will use advanced brain imaging, interviews and behavioral testing to find answers to a number of questions about how childhood experience­s influence brain developmen­t and social, emotional, intellectu­al and physical growth.

Questions like: How does screen time affect social and brain developmen­t? How do sleep patterns affect academic achievemen­t? What are the long-term effects of ADHD medication­s on academics and health? Can football injuries cause brain damage? How does tobacco or alcohol use affect learning and health?

Those questions have been studied in individual labs, but not over a decade by dozens of scientists collaborat­ing at sites across the nation with support from federal and industry partners.

Krista Lisdahl, a UWM associate professor of psychology and principal investigat­or for the UWM site team, expects to recruit 270 students for the study from within a 20mile radius of the Milwaukee County Research Park in Wauwatosa, where the local research is based. Several school districts already have agreed to help identify families that may be interested in participat­ing, she said.

Lisdahl likened the potential breadth and depth of the ABCD Study to the Human Genome Project, an internatio­nal project that gave scientists the ability to read nature’s complete genetic blueprint for building a human being.

“The real power of this study is the number of kids and how nationally representa­tive it will be,” Lisdahl said, noting study participan­ts will be balanced by gender and ethnicity similar to the U.S. Census. The study also is striving to recruit children from different socioecono­mic statuses.

Annual brain imaging of study participan­ts will be especially useful to researcher­s since many smaller studies use only interviews and surveys, Lisdahl said.

Scientists want to better understand biological and environmen­tal building blocks that contribute to successful and resilient young adults.

Lisdahl said knowledge gleaned from the study could lead researcher­s to be able to predict potential developmen­tal problems so they can be prevented or reversed. Interventi­ons will not be part of this research because it is not a clinical trial.

Mental health will be among the facets studied.

“One of the goals is to look at bio-markers or risk factors for early developmen­t of mental health disorders that tend to have their onset in adolescenc­e,” Lisdahl said.

Lisdahl specialize­s in studying the impact of health behaviors such as physical activity and substance use on brain health during adolescenc­e and young adulthood using methods that include brain scanning with magnetic resonance imaging. In 2012, she was awarded the Presidenti­al Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers from President Barack Obama and the NIH.

The research team for the ABCD study has 19 members, including three faculty members from UWM, three from the Medical College of Wisconsin, five graduate students and a postdoctor­al student, plus staff and a consultant. Faculty from the Medical College will oversee the brain imaging.

Elementary schools will be approached on a rolling schedule throughout the next 20 months, and ABCD Study recruitmen­t fliers will be sent home or through email. Some families also will be recruited through mailings to their home.

Families will participat­e at UWM once a year and will be paid for their time. Lisdahl said she knows some families will move over the next 10 years, but with 21 sites around the country, it’s likely that study participan­ts would remain within a four- or five-hour drive of a site for an annual visit.

“Seventy to 80% of kids born in Wisconsin stay in Wisconsin until young adulthood, so I’m not too concerned,” she said. For more informatio­n about the study, visit www.ABCDStudy.org. For more informatio­n about UWM’s involvemen­t, see abcdstudy.org/sites/uwm .html. For a map of all the participat­ing sites in the U.S., see www.abcdstudy .org/about.html.

 ?? PETE AMLAND / UWM PHOTO SERVICES ?? Krista Lisdahl (right), a UWM associate professor of psychology, is leading UWM’s involvemen­t in the brain developmen­t study. Kyle Jennette (left), a graduate student, studies brain scans.
PETE AMLAND / UWM PHOTO SERVICES Krista Lisdahl (right), a UWM associate professor of psychology, is leading UWM’s involvemen­t in the brain developmen­t study. Kyle Jennette (left), a graduate student, studies brain scans.

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