| Literature DB >> 20680137 |
Vani Kulhalli1, Mohan Isaac, Pratima Murthy.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The correlation between cannabis and negative mental health outcomes has been unequivocally established. Nevertheless, there is still a great need to research different dimensions of cannabis-related disorders, among which the study of cannabis-related psychosis is very important. There is a dearth of research regarding phenomenology and effect of abstinence, particularly from India. This study attempts to research the clinical presentation of cannabis-related psychosis and effect of abstinence. AIM: The aim of the present study was to document the clinical presentation of cannabis-related psychosis at presentation and after 7 days' abstinence from cannabis.Entities:
Keywords: Cannabis; drug-induced psychoses; psychoses
Year: 2007 PMID: 20680137 PMCID: PMC2910348 DOI: 10.4103/0019-5545.37665
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Psychiatry ISSN: 0019-5545 Impact factor: 1.759
Subjects with family history positive for mental illness in at least one first-degree relative
| Type of disorder | No. of subjects |
|---|---|
| Substance dependence disorder | 9 |
| Affective disorder | 3 |
| Nonaffective disorder | 12 |
| Other behavioral disorders | 3 |
*Other behavioral disorder includes personality disorder and nonspecified disorders like somatization disorder, dementia and unspecified mental illness
Total Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale scores of subjects on day 0, day 2 and day 7 of study
| BPRS scores | Minimum | Maximum | Mean | SD |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Day 0 | 26 | 58 | 41.6 | 26 |
| Day 2 | 18 | 54 | 33.9 | 10.4 |
| Day 7 | 18 | 55 | 31.55 | 11.62 |
Change in symptom profiles (frequency of patients improved or worsened as per Global Improvement subscore of BPRS)
| Item | Positive scores on day 0 | Decrease in score on day 7 | Increase in score on day 7 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Somatic concern | 4(20) | 4(20) | 1(5) |
| Anxiety | 1(5) | 1(5) | 0 |
| Emotional withdrawal | 7(35) | 5(25) | 1(5) |
| Conceptual disorganization | 10 (50) | 7(35) | 1(5) |
| Guilt feelings | 1(5) | 0 | 0 |
| Tension | 13 (65) | 11 (55) | 1(5) |
| Mannerisms and posturing | 9(45) | 8(40) | 0 |
| Grandiosity | 15 (75) | 10 (50) | 2(10) |
| Depressive mood | 2(10) | 2(10) | 0 |
| Hostility | 11 (55) | 9(45) | 2(10) |
| Suspiciousness | 13 (65) | 7(35) | 3(15) |
| Hallucinatory behavior | 14 (70) | 10 (50) | 1(5) |
| Motor retardation | 2(10) | 0 | 0 |
| Uncooperativeness | 13 (65) | 8(40) | 3(15) |
| Unusual thought content | 20 (100) | 10 (50) | 3(15) |
| Blunted affect | 6(30) | 3(15) | 3(15) |
| Excitement | 15 (75) | 12 (60) | 3(15) |
| Disorientation | 9(45) | 6(30) | 1(5) |
Results indicate number of patients, Figures in parentheses are in percentage
Type of delusion in subjects
| Type | No. of subjects |
|---|---|
| Grandeur | 7 |
| Persecution | 5 |
| Reference | 4 |
| Bizarre | 4 |
| Religious content | 8 |
Changes in the total BPRS scores in intervals of observation period. Student's t-test
| Interval | t-value | df | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Day 0 to day 2 | 3.471 | 19 | 0.003 |
| Day 2 to day 7 | 1.305 | 19 | 0.208 (NS) |
| Day 0 to day 7 | 3.944 | 19 | 0.001 |
Significant