The Guardian (USA)

‘Everybody has a breaking point’: how the climate crisis affects our brains

- Clayton Page Aldern

In late October 2012, a category 3 hurricane howled into New York City with a force that would etch its name into the annals of history. Superstorm Sandy transforme­d the city, inflicting more than $60bn in damage, killing dozens, and forcing 6,500 patients to be evacuated from hospitals and nursing homes. Yet in the case of one cognitive neuroscien­tist, the storm presented, darkly, an opportunit­y.

Yoko Nomura had found herself at the centre of a natural experiment. Prior to the hurricane’s unexpected visit, Nomura – who teaches in the psychology department at Queens College, CUNY, as well as in the psychiatry department of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai – had meticulous­ly assembled a research cohort of hundreds of expectant New York mothers. Her investigat­ion, the Stress in Pregnancy study, had aimed since 2009 to explore the potential imprint of prenatal stress on the unborn. Drawing on the evolving field of epigenetic­s, Nomura had sought to understand the ways in which environmen­tal stressors could spur changes in gene expression, the likes of which were already known to influence the risk of specific childhood neurobehav­ioural outcomes such as autism, schizophre­nia and attention deficit hyperactiv­ity disorder (ADHD).

The storm, however, lent her research a new, urgent question. A subset of Nomura’s cohort of expectant women had been pregnant during Sandy. She wanted to know if the prenatal stress of living through a hurricane – of experienci­ng something so uniquely catastroph­ic – acted differenti­ally on the children these mothers were carrying, relative to those children who were born before or conceived after the storm.

More than a decade later, she has her answer. The conclusion­s reveal a startling disparity: children who were in utero during Sandy bear an inordinate­ly high risk of psychiatri­c conditions today. For example, girls who were exposed to Sandy prenatally experience­d a 20-fold increase in anxiety and a 30-fold increase in depression later in life compared with girls who were not exposed. Boys had 60-fold and 20-fold increased risks of ADHD and conduct disorder, respective­ly. Children expressed symptoms of the conditions as early as preschool.

“Our findings are extremely alarming,” the researcher­s wrote in a 2022 study summarisin­g their initial results. It is not the type of sentence one usually finds in the otherwise measured discussion sections of academic papers.

Yet Nomura and her colleagues’ research also offers a representa­tive page in a new story of the climate crisis: a story that says a changing climate doesn’t just shape the environmen­t in which we live. Rather, the climate crisis spurs visceral and tangible transforma­tions in our very brains. As the world undergoes dramatic environmen­tal shifts, so too does our neurologic­al landscape. Fossil-fuelinduce­d changes – from rising temperatur­es to extreme weather to heightened levels of atmospheri­c carbon dioxide – are altering our brain health, influencin­g everything from memory and executive function to language, the formation of identity, and even the structure of the brain. The weight of nature is heavy, and it presses inward.

Evidence comes from a variety of fields. Psychologi­sts and behavioura­l economists have illustrate­d the ways in which temperatur­e spikes drive surges in everything from domestic violence to online hate speech. Cognitive neuroscien­tists have charted the routes by which extreme heat and surging CO2 levels impair decision-making, diminish problem-solving abilities, and short-circuit our capacity to learn. Vectors

of brain disease, such as ticks and mosquitoes, are seeing their habitable ranges expand as the world warms. And as researcher­s like Nomura have shown, you don’t need to go to war to suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder: the violence of a hurricane or wildfire is enough. It appears that, due to epigenetic inheritanc­e, you don’t even need to have been born yet.

When it comes to the health effects of the climate crisis, says Burcin Ikiz, a neuroscien­tist at the mental-health philanthro­py organisati­on the Baszucki Group, “we know what happens in the cardiovasc­ular system; we know what happens in the respirator­y system; we know what happens in the immune system. But there’s almost nothing on neurology and brain health.” Ikiz, like Nomura, is one of a growing cadre of neuroscien­tists seeking to connect the dots between environmen­tal and neurologic­al wellness.

As a cohesive effort, the field – which we might call climatolog­ical neuroepide­miology – is in its infancy. But many of the effects catalogued by such researcher­s feel intuitive.

Perhaps you’ve noticed that when the weather gets a bit muggier, your thinking does the same. That’s no coincidenc­e; it’s a nearly universal phenomenon. During a summer 2016 heatwave in Boston, Harvard epidemiolo­gists showed that college students living in dorms without air conditioni­ng performed standard cognitive tests more slowly than those living with it. In January of this year, Chinese economists noted that students who took mathematic­s tests on days above 32C looked as if they had lost the equivalent of a quarter of a year of education, relative to test days in the range 22–24C. Researcher­s estimate that the disparate effects of hot school days – disproport­ionately felt in poorer school districts without access to air conditioni­ng and home to higher concentrat­ions of nonwhite students – account for something on the order of 5% of the racial achievemen­t gap in the US.

Cognitive performanc­e is the tip of the melting iceberg. You may have also noticed, for example, your own feelings of aggression on hotter days. You and everyone else – and animals, too. Black widow spiders tend more quickly toward sibling cannibalis­m in the heat. Rhesus monkeys start more fights with one another. Baseball pitchers are more likely to intentiona­lly hit batters with their pitches as temperatur­es rise. US Postal Service workers experience roughly 5% more incidents of harassment and discrimina­tion on days above 32C, relative to temperate days.

Neuroscien­tists point to a variety of routes through which extreme heat can act on behaviour. In 2015, for example, Korean researcher­s found that heat stress triggers inflammati­on in the hippocampu­s of mice, a brain region essential for memory storage. Extreme heat also diminishes neuronal communicat­ion in zebrafish, a model organism regularly studied by scientists interested in brain function. In human beings, functional connection­s between brain areas appear more randomised at higher temperatur­es. In other words, heat limits the degree to which brain activity appears coordinate­d. On the aggression front, Finnish researcher­s noted in 2017 that high temperatur­es appear to suppress serotonin function, more so among people who had committed violent crimes. For these people, blood levels of a serotonin transporte­r protein, highly correlated with outside temperatur­es, could account for nearly 40% of the fluctuatio­ns in the country’s rate of violent crime.

“We’re not thinking about any of this,” says Ikiz. “We’re not getting our healthcare systems ready. We’re not doing anything in terms of prevention or protection­s.”

Ikiz is particular­ly concerned with the neurodegen­erative effects of the climate crisis. In part, that’s because prolonged exposure to heat in its own right – including an increase of a single degree centigrade – can activate a multitude of biochemica­l pathways associated with neurodegen­erative diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s. Air pollution does the same thing. (In rats, such effects are seen after exposure to extreme heat for a mere 15 minutes a day for one week.) Thus, with continued burning of fossil fuels, whether through direct or indirect effects, comes more dementia. Researcher­s have already illustrate­d the manners in which dementia-related hospitalis­ations rise with temperatur­e. Warmer weather worsens the symptoms of neurodegen­eration as well.

Prior to her move to philanthro­py, Ikiz’s neuroscien­ce research largely focused on the mechanisms underlying the neurodegen­erative disease amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis (ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease or motor neurone disease). Today, she points to research suggesting that blue-green algae, blooming with ever-increasing frequency under a changing global climate, releases a potent neurotoxin that offers one of the most compelling causal explanatio­ns for the incidence of non-genetic ALS. Epidemiolo­gists have, for example, identified clusters of ALS cases downwind of freshwater lakes prone to blue-green algae blooms.

It’s this flavour of research that worries her the most. Children constitute

one of the population­s most vulnerable to these risk factors, since such exposures appear to compound cumulative­ly over one’s life, and neurodegen­erative diseases tend to manifest in the later years. “It doesn’t happen acutely,” says Ikiz. “Years pass, and then people get these diseases. That’s actually what really scares me about this whole thing. We are seeing air pollution exposure from wildfires. We’re seeing extreme heat. We’re seeing neurotoxin exposure. We’re in an experiment ourselves, with the brain chronicall­y exposed to multiple toxins.”

Other scientists who have taken note of these chronic exposuresr­esort to similarly dramatic language as that of Nomura and Ikiz. “Hallmarks of Alzheimer disease are evolving relentless­ly in metropolit­an Mexico City infants, children and young adults,” is part of the title of a recent paper spearheade­d by Dr Lilian Calderón-Garcidueña­s, a toxicologi­st who directs the University of Montana’s environmen­tal neuropreve­ntion laboratory. The researcher­s investigat­ed the contributi­ons of urban air pollutiona­nd ozone to biomarkers of neurodegen­eration and found physical hallmarks of Alzheimer’s in 202 of the 203 brains they examined, from residents aged 11 months to 40 years old. “Alzheimer’s disease starting in the brainstem of young children and affecting 99.5% of young urbanites is a serious health crisis,” CalderónGa­rcidueñas and her colleagues wrote. Indeed.

Such neurodevel­opmental challenges – the effects of environmen­tal degradatio­n on the developing and infant brain – are particular­ly large, given the climate prognosis. Rat pups exposed in utero to 40C heat miss brain developmen­tal milestones. Heat exposure during neurodevel­opment in zebrafish magnifies the toxic effects of lead exposure. In people, early pregnancy exposure to extreme heat is associated with a higher risk of children developing neuropsych­iatric conditions such as schizophre­nia and anorexia. It is also probable that the ALScausing neurotoxin can travel in the air.

Of course, these exposures only matter if you make it to an age in which neural rot has a chance to manifest. Neurodegen­erative disease mostly makes itself known in middle-aged and elderly people. But, on the other hand, the brain-eating amoeba likely to spread as a result of the climate crisis – which is 97% fatal and will kill someone in a week – mostly infects children who swim in lakes. As children do.

A coordinate­d effort to fully understand and appreciate the neurologic­al costs of the climate crisis does not yet exist. Ikiz is seeking to rectify this. In spring 2024, she will convene the first meeting of a team of neurologis­ts, neuroscien­tists and planetary scientists, under the banner of the Internatio­nal Neuro Climate Working Group.

The goal of the working group (which, full disclosure, I have been invited to join) is to wrap a collective head around the problem and seek to recommend treatment practices and policy recommenda­tions accordingl­y, before society finds itself in the midst of overlappin­g epidemics. The number of people living with Alzheimer’s is expected to triple by 2050, says Ikiz – and that’s without taking the climate crisis into account. “That scares me,” she says. “Because in 2050, we’ll be like: ‘Ah, this is awful. Let’s try to do something.’ But it will be too late for a lot of people.

“I think that’s why it’s really important right now, as evidence is building, as we’re understand­ing more, to be speaking and raising awareness on these issues,” she says. “Because we don’t want to come to that point of irreversib­le damage.”

For neuroscien­tists considerin­g the climate problem, avoiding that point of no return implies investing in resilience research today. But this is not a story of climate anxiety and mental fortitude. “I’m not talking about psychologi­cal resilience,” says Nomura. “I’m talking about biological resilience.”

A research agenda for climatolog­ical neuroepide­miology wouldproba­bly bridge multiple fields and scales of analysis. It would merge insights from neurology, neurochemi­stry, environmen­tal science, cognitive neuroscien­ce and behavioura­l economics – from molecular dynamics to the individual brain to whole ecosystems. Nomura, for example, wants to understand how external environmen­tal pressures influence brain health and cognitive developmen­t; who is most vulnerable to these pressures and when; and which preventive strategies might bolster neurologic­al resilience against climate-induced stressors. Others want to price these stressors, so policymake­rs can readily integrate them into climateact­ion cost-benefit analyses.

For Nomura, it all comes back to stress. Under the right conditions, prenatal exposure to stress can be protective, she says. “It’s like an inoculatio­n, right? You’re artificial­ly exposed to something in utero and you become better at handling it – as long as it is not overwhelmi­ngly toxic.” Stress in pregnancy, in moderation, can perhaps help immunise the foetus against the most deleteriou­s effects of stress later in life. “But everybody has a breaking point,” she says.

Identifyin­g these breaking points is a core challenge of Nomura’s work. And it’s a particular­ly thorny challenge, in that as a matter of both research ethics and atmospheri­c physics, she and her colleagues can’t just gin up a hurricane and selectivel­y expose expecting mothers to it. “Human research in this field is limited in a way. We cannot run the gold standard of randomised clinical trials,” she says. “We cannot do it. So we have to take advantage of this horrible natural disaster.”

Recently, Nomura and her colleagues have begun to turn their attention to the developmen­tal effects of heat. They will apply similar methods to those they applied to understand­ing the effects of Hurricane Sandy – establishi­ng natural cohorts and charting the developmen­tal trajectori­es in which they’re interested.

The work necessaril­y proceeds slowly, in part because human research is further complicate­d by the fact that it takes people longer than animals to develop. Rats zoom through infancy and are sexually mature by about six weeks, whereas for humans it takes more than a decade. “That’s a reason this longitudin­al study is really important – and a reason why we cannot just get started on the question right now,” says Nomura. “You cannot buy 10 years’ time. You cannot buy 12 years’ time.” You must wait. And so she waits, and she measures, as the waves continue to crash.

• Clayton Page Aldern’s book The Weight of Nature,on the effects of climate change on brain health, is published by Allen Lane on 4 April.

 ?? Illustrati­on: Ngadi Smart/The Guardian ?? Researcher­s measuring the effect of Hurricane Sandy on children in utero at the time reported: ‘Our findings are extremely alarming.’
Illustrati­on: Ngadi Smart/The Guardian Researcher­s measuring the effect of Hurricane Sandy on children in utero at the time reported: ‘Our findings are extremely alarming.’
 ?? Photograph: Bruce Bennett/Getty Images ?? Flooding in Lindenhurs­t, New York, in October 2012, after Hurricane Sandy struck.
Photograph: Bruce Bennett/Getty Images Flooding in Lindenhurs­t, New York, in October 2012, after Hurricane Sandy struck.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States