| Literature DB >> 27225696 |
J G Ramaekers1, J H van Wel1, D B Spronk2, S W Toennes3, K P C Kuypers1, E L Theunissen1, R J Verkes2,4.
Abstract
Cannabis use history as predictor of neurocognitive response to cannabis intoxication remains subject to scientific and policy debates. The present study assessed the influence of cannabis on neurocognition in cannabis users whose cannabis use history ranged from infrequent to daily use. Drug users (N = 122) received acute doses of cannabis (300 μg/kg THC), cocaine HCl (300 mg) and placebo. Cocaine served as active control for demonstrating neurocognitive test sensitivity. Executive function, impulse control, attention, psychomotor function and subjective intoxication were significantly worse after cannabis administration relative to placebo. Cocaine improved psychomotor function and attention, impaired impulse control and increased feelings of intoxication. Acute effects of cannabis and cocaine on neurocognitive performance were similar across cannabis users irrespective of their cannabis use history. Absence of tolerance implies that that frequent cannabis use and intoxication can be expected to interfere with neurocognitive performance in many daily environments such as school, work or traffic.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27225696 PMCID: PMC4881034 DOI: 10.1038/srep26843
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Randomization of participants (A) and frequency distribution of cannabis and cocaine use across study participants (N = 122) prior to study entrance and number of participants allocated to 4 cannabis use history groups (B).
Figure 2Mean (se) subjective intoxication and task performance following acute doses of cannabis (CAN), cocaine (COC) and placebo (PLA) as a function of cannabis use history.
Summary of significant changes (p, F) in subjective intoxication and performance measures induced by cannabis (CAN), cocaine (COC) and their interaction with Cannabis Use History (CUH) as indicated by GLM drug-placebo contrast analyses.
| CAN | CAN × CUH | COC | COC × CUH | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subjective intoxication | 0.000, F1,116 = 357,6 | – | 0.000, F1,116 = 75,6 | – |
| TOL - correct decisions | 0.000, F1,109 = 27,6 | – | – | – |
| SST - commission errors | 0.000, F1,110 = 15,5 | – | 0.000, F1,110 = 15,1 | – |
| DAT - tracking error | 0.019, F1,88 = 5,7 | – | 0.000, F1,88 = 55,7 | – |
| DAT – hits | 0.010, F1,88 = 6,9 | – | 0.000, F1,88 = 28,6 | – |
| CTT - lambda-c | 0.000, F1,109 = 13,9 | 0.032, F3,109 = 3.1 | 0.000, F1,109 = 39,7 | 0.008, F3,109 = 4.2 |
Figure 3Scatterplots of individual changes (from placebo) in subjective intoxication and task performance following acute doses of cannabis (CAN) and cocaine (COC) as a function of cannabis use history.
Significant (p < 0.05) correlations (r) between changes in subjective intoxication/task performance and cannabis use history are shown. (Impairment = −; Improvement = +).
Mean (sd) concentrations of THC, cocaine and their main metabolites at baseline and after drug administration (i.e. 5 min post smoking cannabis and 65 min post oral cocaine).
| THC [ng/ml] | THC-OH [ng/ml] | THC-COOH [ng/ml] | Cocaine [mg/L] | BZE [mg/L] | EME [mg/L] | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.57 (4.14) | 0.62 (1.72) | 20.91 (37.68) | 0.00 (0.0) | 0.00 (0.00) | 0.00 (0.00) | |
| 73.81 (63.09) | 6.86 (4.32) | 38.69 (33.38) | 0.25 (0.19) | 0.49 (0.27) | 0.14 (0.11) |
Figure 4Scatterplots showing significant (p < 0.05) correlations (r) between (A) THC concentration at baseline and cannabis use history and between (B) CTT task performance/subjective intoxication and baseline THC/cannabis use history during placebo.