Health Topics

How Nicotine Rewires the Adolescent Brain

Research shows that nicotine exposure during adolescence causes lasting structural changes in the brain's reward circuitry — changes that persist into adulthood.

The adolescent brain is in a critical period of development, with the prefrontal cortex not fully mature until around age 25. Nicotine exploits this window — it binds to acetylcholine receptors, flooding the nucleus accumbens with dopamine and creating a powerful reward signal that the developing brain is ill-equipped to resist.

Longitudinal imaging studies show that even brief nicotine exposure during adolescence produces measurable changes in white-matter connectivity and reduces the density of dopaminergic receptor sites, making the brain permanently more susceptible to addiction.

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