How does alcohol cause blackouts? - Shannon Odell

1,140,199 views ・ 2024-02-01

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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In 1969, Dr. Donald Goodwin gathered a group of study participants
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and asked them each to recall the object he'd shown them two minutes prior.
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The twist?
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All the participants were very intoxicated.
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Despite this, most could pay attention to the task
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and correctly name the toy they had just seen.
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Yet, when Donald asked them to recall that object a mere 30 minutes later,
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half the participants drew a blank,
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having “blacked out” the earlier moment entirely.
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This study illustrates the strange and somewhat selective effects
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alcohol has on the brain.
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Many intoxicated people can perform complex tasks
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like holding a detailed conversation or navigating a walk home.
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Yet for those experiencing what is known as a blackout,
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the memory of these events is quickly forgotten.
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So how does alcohol cause these memory lapses?
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First, let's identify the culprit.
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While a single drink often contains hundreds of different chemical compounds,
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ethanol is responsible for alcohol's effects on the brain.
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Ethanol is lightweight and lipophilic,
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meaning its structure easily dissolves into fats,
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like those in the membranes of the outer blood-brain barrier.
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Once inside the brain, ethanol’s unique structure
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allows it to bind to, interact, and affect many different neuronal receptors,
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impairing pathways that allow you to make careful decisions, control your impulses,
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and even manage your motor skills.
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And the networks that control memory seem to be especially sensitive
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to alcohol’s effects.
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Typically, information about your surroundings is taken in
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by your sensory organs and sent to the brain.
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Neurons transfer this information to one another
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via chemical messengers called neurotransmitters,
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which are released by one neuron and received by receptors at another.
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When a neurotransmitter binds to a receptor,
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it unlocks an internal channel, allowing small ions to flow into the cell.
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If enough ions enter the cell, the neuron fires,
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sending the signal forward.
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Through this process, different regions of the brain
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can communicate with one another in milliseconds,
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creating our moment-to-moment understanding of the world.
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But ethanol interacts with receptors,
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making it harder for neurons to communicate.
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While compromised, the brain is still able to transfer information,
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which is why many intoxicated people seem somewhat capable
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of performing basic tasks.
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In other words, brain function is highly impaired,
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but not completely broken.
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But memory storage is a different story.
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The transfer of moment-to-moment understanding
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to something we can remember is thought to depend on a process
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called long-term potentiation, or LTP.
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LTP happens throughout the brain,
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but is especially important in learning and memory regions,
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like the neocortex and the hippocampus.
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During LTP,
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the firing of a neuron triggers physical changes to its structure.
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For example, more receptors may be moved to the cell's surface,
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making the neuron more sensitive to future signaling from its neighbors.
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These physical changes increase the likelihood that a cell
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will fire again at that connection,
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strengthening the wiring between neurons.
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And through this stronger connection,
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it's thought that a stable memory is formed.
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Yet studies suggest that ethanol has a unique ability to disrupt LTP,
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blocking the physical changes needed for memory formation.
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So, while moment-to-moment information is encoded and understood,
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the storage of that information is blunted,
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resulting in a blackout.
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Of course, not all levels of drinking result in blackouts.
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They happen when the concentration of alcohol in the blood, or BAC,
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exceeds a certain level, approximately 0.16.
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But there’s no magic number.
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At slightly lower BACs, brownouts, or the spotty memory of events, can occur,
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as some neurons continue to function properly while others fail.
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And drinking too much can cause a person to pass out altogether.
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Other factors like dehydration level, genetic differences, medications,
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and even how much you’ve eaten can affect the likelihood of a blackout.
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And teenagers appear to be especially vulnerable
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due to the substantial changes in brain development during those years.
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Alcohol’s short-term effects usually don’t last longer
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than the time it takes for their body to metabolize it, or about a day.
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But repeatedly over-drinking can damage neurons and permanently impair memory.
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It can also harm other organs like the liver,
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which works overtime breaking down alcohol.
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After all, experiencing a blackout or witnessing others
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in this compromised state
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can be a lot for your mind and body to process.
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