5 results on '"Meruelo, Alejandro D."'
Search Results
2. Neuropsychological performance in adolescent marijuana users with co-occurring alcohol use: A three-year longitudinal study.
- Author
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Jacobus J, Squeglia LM, Infante MA, Castro N, Brumback T, Meruelo AD, and Tapert SF
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Underage Drinking, Young Adult, Alcohol Drinking adverse effects, Cognition Disorders chemically induced, Marijuana Smoking adverse effects, Psychomotor Performance drug effects
- Abstract
Objective: The effect of adolescent marijuana use on brain development remains unclear despite relaxing legal restrictions, decreased perceived harm, and increasing use rates among youth. The aim of this 3-year prospective study was to evaluate the long-term neurocognitive effects of adolescent marijuana use., Method: Adolescent marijuana users with concomitant alcohol use (MJ + ALC, n = 49) and control teens with limited substance use histories (CON, n = 59) were given neuropsychological and substance use assessments at project baseline, when they were ages 16-19. They were then reassessed 18 and 36 months later. Changes in neuropsychological measures were evaluated with repeated measures analysis of covariance (ANCOVA), controlling for lifetime alcohol use, and examined the effects of group, time, and group by time interactions on cognitive functioning., Results: MJ + ALC users performed significantly worse than controls, across time points, in the domains of complex attention, memory, processing speed, and visuospatial functioning (ps <.05). Earlier age of marijuana use onset was associated with poorer processing speed and executive functioning by the 3-year follow-up (ps ≤.02)., Conclusions: Frequent marijuana use throughout adolescence and into young adulthood appeared linked to worsened cognitive performance. Earlier age of onset appears to be associated with poorer neurocognitive outcomes that emerge by young adulthood, providing further support for the notion that the brain may be uniquely sensitive to frequent marijuana exposure during the adolescent phase of neurodevelopment. Continued follow-up of adolescent marijuana users will determine the extent of neural recovery that may occur if use abates., ((c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Assessing cross-lagged associations between depression, anxiety, and binge drinking in the National Consortium on Alcohol and Neurodevelopment in Adolescence (NCANDA) study
- Author
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McCabe, Connor J, Brumback, Ty, Brown, Sandra A, and Meruelo, Alejandro D
- Subjects
Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Biological Sciences ,Epidemiology ,Health Sciences ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Underage Drinking ,Brain Disorders ,Substance Misuse ,Women's Health ,Alcoholism ,Alcohol Use and Health ,Mental Illness ,Pediatric ,Depression ,Mental Health ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Adolescent ,Female ,Young Adult ,Adult ,Child ,Binge Drinking ,Anxiety ,Anxiety Disorders ,Alcoholism ,Alcohol Drinking ,Binge drinking ,Adolescence ,Longitudinal ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Substance Abuse ,Biochemistry and cell biology ,Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundBetween 20 % and 30 % of teens suffer from depression or anxiety before reaching adulthood, and up to half also use or misuse alcohol. Although theories suggest bidirectional links between harmful alcohol use (e.g., binge drinking) and internalizing symptoms (i.e., depression and anxiety), empirical evidence to-date has been mixed. Systematic reviews have attributed mixed findings to limitations in study design, such as the utilization of between-person analyses and the focus on unidirectional effects. The goal of this study was to address these limitations by assessing bidirectional within-person associations between internalizing symptoms and binge drinking over the course of 5 years in the National Consortium on Alcohol and Neurodevelopment in Adolescence (NCANDA) sample, a large cohort recruited at ages 12-21 and followed annually on substance use and psychiatric functioning.MethodsWe used latent curve models with structured residuals to examine within-person lagged associations between depression, anxiety, and past month counts of binge drinking using NCANDA data (N = 831). Analyses were supplemented with post-hoc power simulations.ResultsWe found marginal evidence linking binge drinking with subsequent depression symptoms one year later among females. We found no evidence that depression or anxiety predicted subsequent binge drinking despite sufficient power.ConclusionsSocial and cognitive consequences of binge drinking may predict later depression symptoms in adolescence and young adulthood for young women, though there was little evidence favoring self-medication models for binge drinking. We note several moderating variables and common factor mechanisms that may better explain this link.
- Published
- 2023
4. Associations of developmental imbalance between sensation seeking and premeditation in adolescence and heavy episodic drinking in emerging adulthood.
- Author
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McCabe, Connor J., Wall, Tamara L., Gonzalez, Marybel R., Meruelo, Alejandro D., Eberson‐Shumate, Sonja C., Clark, Duncan B., Nooner, Kate B., Brown, Sandra Ann, and Tapert, Susan F.
- Subjects
SENSES ,BINGE drinking ,COGNITION ,RISK assessment ,HEALTH behavior ,ALCOHOL drinking ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PREANESTHETIC medication ,LONGITUDINAL method ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Background: Dual systems theories suggest that greater imbalance between higher reward sensitivity and lower cognitive control across adolescence conveys risk for behaviors such as heavy episodic drinking (HED). Prior research demonstrated that psychological analogues of these systems, sensation seeking and premeditation, change from childhood through emerging adulthood, and each has been independently linked with HED. However, few studies have assessed whether change over time in these developing analogues is prospectively associated with HED. Moreover, we know of no research that has shown whether within‐person differences between higher sensation seeking and relatively lower premeditation across the adolescent period predict HED in emerging adulthood. Methods: Prospective data from the National Consortium on Alcohol and NeuroDevelopment in Adolescence study (n = 715) were used to examine the association of sensation seeking and premeditation with HED among adolescents ages 16 to 20 years. We used novel applications of latent difference score modeling and growth curve analysis to test whether increasing sensation seeking, premeditation, and their imbalance over time are associated with HED across the study period, and whether these associations differed by sex. Results: Whereas premeditation increased linearly from adolescence through emerging adulthood across sexes, males reported growth and females reported decline in sensation seeking. Sensation seeking in adolescence (and not premeditation) was associated with higher levels of HED by emerging adulthood. Importantly, greater imbalance between sensation seeking and premeditation was associated with higher levels of HED by emerging adulthood though we note that variability capturing this imbalance correlated highly (r = 0.86) with baseline levels of sensation seeking. Conclusions: Developmental imbalance between higher sensation seeking and lower premeditation in late adolescence may be a risk factor for greater HED in emerging adulthood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Assessing cross-lagged associations between depression, anxiety, and binge drinking in the National Consortium on Alcohol and Neurodevelopment in Adolescence (NCANDA) study.
- Author
-
McCabe, Connor J., Brumback, Ty, Brown, Sandra A., and Meruelo, Alejandro D.
- Subjects
- *
BINGE drinking , *YOUNG adults , *DEPRESSION in adolescence , *ANXIETY , *ALCOHOL drinking , *ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Between 20 % and 30 % of teens suffer from depression or anxiety before reaching adulthood, and up to half also use or misuse alcohol. Although theories suggest bidirectional links between harmful alcohol use (e.g., binge drinking) and internalizing symptoms (i.e., depression and anxiety), empirical evidence to-date has been mixed. Systematic reviews have attributed mixed findings to limitations in study design, such as the utilization of between-person analyses and the focus on unidirectional effects. The goal of this study was to address these limitations by assessing bidirectional within-person associations between internalizing symptoms and binge drinking over the course of 5 years in the National Consortium on Alcohol and Neurodevelopment in Adolescence (NCANDA) sample, a large cohort recruited at ages 12–21 and followed annually on substance use and psychiatric functioning. We used latent curve models with structured residuals to examine within-person lagged associations between depression, anxiety, and past month counts of binge drinking using NCANDA data (N = 831). Analyses were supplemented with post-hoc power simulations. We found marginal evidence linking binge drinking with subsequent depression symptoms one year later among females. We found no evidence that depression or anxiety predicted subsequent binge drinking despite sufficient power. Social and cognitive consequences of binge drinking may predict later depression symptoms in adolescence and young adulthood for young women, though there was little evidence favoring self-medication models for binge drinking. We note several moderating variables and common factor mechanisms that may better explain this link. • Data involved a large and national longitudinal sample of community adolescents. • Binge drinking predicted depression in females one year later across adolescence. • Effects were unidirectional, showing little evidence of self-medication processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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