| Literature DB >> 24137134 |
Raymond J M Niesink1, Margriet W van Laar.
Abstract
The recreational use of cannabis can have persistent adverse effects on mental health. Delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) is the main psychoactive constituent of cannabis, and most, if not all, of the effects associated with the use of cannabis are caused by THC. Recent studies have suggested a possible protective effect of another cannabinoid, cannabidiol (CBD). A literature search was performed in the bibliographic databases PubMed, PsycINFO, and Web of Science using the keyword "cannabidiol." After removing duplicate entries, 1295 unique titles remained. Based on the titles and abstracts, an initial selection was made. The reference lists of the publications identified in this manner were examined for additional references. Cannabis is not a safe drug. Depending on how often someone uses, the age of onset, the potency of the cannabis that is used and someone's individual sensitivity, the recreational use of cannabis may cause permanent psychological disorders. Most recreational users will never be faced with such persistent mental illness, but in some individuals cannabis use leads to undesirable effects: cognitive impairment, anxiety, paranoia, and increased risks of developing chronic psychosis or drug addiction. Studies examining the protective effects of CBD have shown that CBD can counteract the negative effects of THC. However, the question remains of how the laboratory results translate to the types of cannabis that are encountered by real-world recreational users.Entities:
Keywords: anxiety; cannabidiol; cannabis; cognition; drug dependence; psychosis; tetrahydrocannabinol
Year: 2013 PMID: 24137134 PMCID: PMC3797438 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2013.00130
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Summary of “naturalistic” studies in which the effects of cannabidiol and cannabis with a high dosis of THC on psychological functions have been investigated.
| Reference | Subjects | THC/CBD | Results | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Di Forti et al. ( | “First-episode” psychiatric patients ( | Self reported frequency and type of cannabis used | The chance that high-potent cannabis (THC) has been used is higher among “first-episode” psychotic patients than among non-psychotics | Also more frequent use in “first-episode” psychotic patients |
| Morgan and Curran ( | Cannabis users ( | Grouping based on presence of THC and/or CBD in hair | More psychotic symptoms among THC group in comparison with no THC group and in group with THC and CBD in hair | THC might be psychotogenic and CBD might protect against this effect |
| Schubart et al. ( | Websurvey among cannabis users ( | Grouping based on self reported preference for type of cannabis | Less psychotic symptoms in cannabis users who use cannabis with high level of CBD (hash) | Personal communication with author (Schubart) |
| Morgan et al. ( | Cannabis users, at least once a month ( | Choosing cannabis by cannabis user | Acute effects on mood, psychotic symptoms, and cognition | CBD attenuates the THC-induced memory impairment; CBD does not affect psychotomimetic symptoms |
| Morgan et al. ( | Recreational cannabis users ( | Measuring THC and CBD in hair | THC increases possibility of negative psychotic symptoms, CBD antagonizes (part of) THC-induced effects |
Overview of studies investigating the effect of cannabidiol or cannabidiol in combination with THC on psychological functions in humans. Studies in which cannabis extracts have been used are not included.
| Reference | Subjects | Dosing THC/CBD | Results | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Karniol et al. ( | Healthy volunteers ( | 30 mg THC (oral); 15, 30 of 60 mg CBD (oral) or in combination with 30 mg THC (both oral) | Antagonizing (part of) the THC-induced effects | CBD decreased the anxiety component of THC effects; no effect of CBD alone |
| Hollister and Gillespie ( | Healthy volunteers ( | 20 mg THC + 40 mg CBD (both oral) | CBD delays onset of the effect of THC and prolongs the effects of THC | |
| Dalton et al. ( | Healthy volunteers ( | 25 μg/kg BW THC and 150 μg/kg BW CBD via smoking a joint | CBD reduces euphoric effect of THC | Only effective when CBD and THC are administered simultaneously |
| Hollister ( | Healthy volunteers ( | CBD 5–30 mg i.v. | No effects | |
| Carlini and Cunha ( | Healthy volunteers | Acute 600 mg CBD; 10 mg/kg/BW CBD 20 days | CBD does not have psychological or physical effects | Light drowsiness after CBD administration |
| Zuardi et al. ( | Healthy volunteers ( | 0.5 mg/kg BW THC + 1 mg/kg BW CBD (both oral) | CBD antagonizes psychological effects of THC (anxiety) | CBD itself has no effect and does not antagonize the physical effects of THC (HR, BP) |
| Zuardi et al. ( | Treatment resistant schizophrenic patients ( | CBD during 29 days upwards from 40 to 1280 mg/day (oral) | CBD does not antagonize symptoms | No side effects of CBD reported |
| Crippa et al. ( | Healthy volunteers ( | CBD 400 mg oral | Anxiolytic effects; light mental sedation | SPECT results: effects in left amygdala-hippocampus complex radiating to hypothalamus |
| Leweke et al. ( | Psychiatric patients ( | CBD oral 800 mg/day; during 4 weeks | CBD more effective as antipychotic than amsulpride | Less side effects of CBD than with amsulpride |
| Zuardi et al. ( | PD patients with psychoses | CBD 150 mg/day; during 4 weeks | CBD possibly effective for treatment of PD patients suffering from psychoses | No significant side effects of CBD reported |
| Borgwardt et al. ( | Healthy volunteers ( | CBD oral 600 mg; 10 mg THC (not simultaneously); in comparison with placebo | No effect in contrast with THC; CBD activates other brain areas than THC no effects of CBD in verbal learning task and no induction of psychotic symptoms | No sedation and no inhibition of locomotion by CBD; THC induces psychotic symptoms, anxiety, and sedation |
| Zuardi et al. ( | Patients with bipolar disorder ( | CBD oral 600 – 1200 mg/day during 25 days | CBD has no effect on symptoms | No side effects of CBD reported |
| Bhattacharyya et al. ( | Healthy volunteers ( | CBD 5 mg i.v. immediately followed by 1.25 mg THC i.v. | CBD antagonizes THC-induced psychotic symptoms | CBD and THC have opposite effects on regional brain function |
| Bergamaschi et al. ( | Healthy controls ( | CBD oral 600 mg | Reduction of anxiety scores in patients, no effect in controls | No physical effects or side effects of CBD reported |
| Crippa et al. ( | Patients with social phobia ( | CBD oral 400 mg | No effect on psychological scores | No physical effects; SPECT: CBD exerts its effects via limbic and paralimbic areas |
| Nicholson et al. ( | Healthy volunteers ( | CBD 5 mg + THC 5 mg; CBD 15 mg + THC 15 mg, via mouth spray | THC (15 mg) increases drowsiness, antagonized by CBD (15 mg) | |
| Hallak et al. ( | Schizophrenic patients ( | CBD oral 300 and 600 mg acute | No positive effects in Stroop Color Word Test | No significant side effects of CBD reported |
| Hallak et al. ( | Healthy volunteers ( | CBD oral 600 mg and ketamine i.v. | CBD increases activating effects of ketamine (BPRS); reduction of ketamine-induced depersonalization (CADSS) | No effect of CBD on HR and BP |
a This concerns experiments with one group of 15 subjects from which the results have been spread over four different publications; BP, blood pressure; BW, body weight; CADSS, Clinician Administered Dissociative States Scale; HR, heart rate; i.v., intravenously; PD, Parkinson disease.