The Guardian (USA)

Brains of post-pandemic teens show signs of faster ageing, study finds

- Nicola Davis Science correspond­ent

The brains of teenagers who lived through the Covid pandemic show signs of premature ageing, research suggests.

The researcher­s compared MRI scans of 81 teens in the US taken before the pandemic, between November 2016 and November 2019, with those of 82 teens collected between October 2020 and March 2022, during the pandemic but after lockdowns were lifted.

After matching 64 participan­ts in each group for factors including age and sex, the team found that physical changes in the brain that occurred during adolescenc­e – such as thinning of the cortex and growth of the hippocampu­s and the amygdala – were greater in the post-lockdown group than in the pre-pandemic group, suggesting such processes had sped up. In other words, their brains had aged faster.

“Brain age difference was about three years – we hadn’t expected that large an increase given that the lockdown was less than a year [long],” said Ian Gotlib, a professor of psychology at Stanford University and first author of the study.

Writing in the journal Biological Psychiatry: Global Open Science, the team report that the participan­ts – a representa­tive sample of adolescent­s in the Bay Area in California – originally agreed to take part in a study looking at the impact of early life stress on mental health across puberty. As a result, participan­ts were also assessed for symptoms of depression and anxiety.

The post-lockdown group self-reported greater mental health difficulti­es, including more severe symptoms of anxiety, depression and internalis­ing problems.

Gotlib said the findings chimed with those from other researcher­s studying the impact of the pandemic on teens’ mental health. “Deteriorat­ion in mental health is accompanie­d by physical changes in the brain for teens, likely due to the stress of the pandemic,” he said.

But it is not yet clear whether the poorer mental health captured in the study is driven by faster brain ageing, or even whether the latter is bad news for teens.

“We don’t know that yet – we are starting to rescan all of the participan­ts at age 20, so we’ll have a better sense of whether these changes persist or start to diminish with time,” Gotlib said.

“In older adults, these brain changes are often associatio­n with reduced cognitive functionin­g. It’s not clear yet what they mean in adolescent­s. But this is the first demonstrat­ion that difficulti­es in mental health during the pandemic are accompanie­d by what seem to be stress-related changes in brain structure.”

Michael Thomas, a professor of cognitive neuroscien­ce at Birkbeck University of London, who was not involved in the study, said the research confirmed the struggles that teenagers in particular experience­d in the pandemic, with increases in anxiety and depression. But, he added, it was hard to know what difference­s in the size of brain structure meant for current or future behaviour.

“Large-scale measures of the brain don’t tell us about the detailed circuits that drive behaviour. I would say it’s very speculativ­e what, if any, long term consequenc­es there will be, and whether these brain changes will be enduring or fade away.”

Thomas also stressed that it was not clear that potential impacts would necessaril­y be negative, noting some of the accelerate­d changes reported by the team were also associated with higher performanc­e, such as in intelligen­ce tests.

“Famously, London taxi drivers were reported to have larger hippocampu­ses too,” he said. “In short, these are interestin­g data to show that the pandemic may have had profound effects on teenagers, enough to be reflected in measures of brain structure; but these data can’t tell us whether negative long-term outcomes are inevitable, or whether the plasticity of the brain will allow this generation to bounce back.”

 ?? ?? Brain age difference was about three years, the researcher­s found. Photograph: Getty Images
Brain age difference was about three years, the researcher­s found. Photograph: Getty Images

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