| Literature DB >> 27525213 |
Ariel Ketcherside1, Jessica Baine1, Francesca Filbey1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tetrahydrocannabinol (Δ9-THC), the primary ingredient in marijuana, exerts its effects across several neurological and biological systems that interact with the endocrine system. Thus, differential effects of Δ9-THC are likely to exist based on sex and hormone levels.Entities:
Keywords: Cannabis; Gender; Gendered treatment; MRI; Neuroimaging; Sexual dimorphism; THC
Year: 2016 PMID: 27525213 PMCID: PMC4961737 DOI: 10.1007/s40429-016-0114-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Addict Rep
Neurocognitive differences across male and female marijuana users
| Authors | Modality | Participants | Putative difference between males and females |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anderson et al. (2010) [ | Double-blind, placebo-controlled (active or placebo marijuana cigarette) | 50 males, 35 females | No sex differences were observed. |
| Anderson et al. (2010) [ | Attention, cognitive flexibility, time estimation, and visuospatial processing tasks | 70 occasional marijuana users (50 % male) | No sex differences were observed, though the authors discuss a higher rate of study attrition in females. |
| Block et al. (1991) [ | Blood sample collection, hormone analyses, and substance use questionnaires | 93 males and 56 females with either frequent, moderate, infrequent, or no marijuana use | No effect of chronic marijuana use on sex hormones (FSH, prolactin, LH, or testosterone) was found. |
| Block et al. (2000) [ | Imaging: volume | 18 adult marijuana users (50 % male) vs. 13 controls (46 % male) | Sex differences were detected in several brain volume measures. |
| Buckner et al. (2012) [ | Multi-site, marijuana smoking history, MMM, MPS, SIAS | 174 current marijuana users (57.5 % male) | Social anxiety in men was positively related to CUD problems and conforming and coping motives. Females demonstrated a positive correlation between social anxiety with social motives only. |
| Buckner et al. (2006) [ | SCID DSM-IV-TR (SCID I/NP) and self-report questionnaires | 123 undergraduates (40.7 % male) | Symptoms of social anxiety disorder were correlated with CUD symptoms in women only, and peer use of both alcohol and marijuana was found to moderate this relationship. |
| Cooper and Haney (2014) [ | Data combined from four double-blind, within-subject studies using active vs. inactive marijuana | 35 male vs. 35 female marijuana users | Women reported higher ratings of abuse-related effects relative to men under the active marijuana condition, but men and women did not differ in self-reported ratings of intoxication. |
| Copersino et al. (2010) [ | Retrospective self-report measures | 104 non-treatment seeking adult marijuana smokers (78 % male) | Females were more likely than males to report a withdrawal symptom (upset stomach, increased sex drive, marijuana craving). |
| Cousijn et al. (2012) [ | Imaging: voxel-based morphometry (VBM) | 33 heavy marijuana users (64 % male) vs. 42 controls (62 % male) | No interactions of either gray matter or white matter differences and sex was found between either of the groups. |
| Crane et al. (2013) [ | Neuropsychological tests | 44 male vs. 25 female marijuana users | Earlier age of initiated use was related to less education, lower IQ, fewer years of maternal education, and poorer episodic memory in women only, but more lifetime marijuana use in men. |
| Felton et al. (2015) [ | Self-report and BART task over period of grades 8–12 | 115 male and 89 female adolescents | An interaction of sex and disinhibition suggested that only males who self-reported greater disinhibition showed greater increases in their marijuana use. |
| Gillespie et al. (2011) [ | Structured interviews on DSM-IV criteria of CUD | 7316 adult male and female twins | Lower factor loadings for women suggest that legal problems may discriminate better among men. |
| Guxens et al. (2007) [ | Cohort study, self-administered lifestyle questionnaire | 1056 adolescents (52.2 % male) | Fewer factors predicting marijuana use were found in males than in females. Predictive variables reflecting type of school, family situation, and academic performance were present only among girls. |
| Hernandez-Avila et al. (2004) [ | Self-report | 271 substance-dependent patients (42 % male), 38 of those were marijuana-dependent (47 % male) | No sex effects on age of onset for marijuana users were found. Women who were marijuana-dependent reported less pretreatment years of regular marijuana consumption, compared to men. Women were less likely than men to be diagnosed with current marijuana dependence. |
| Johnson et al. (2015) [ | Data from National Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS) 1999–2013 | 115,379 adolescents (50 % male) | Sex differences were observed to substantially decrease over time for each race/ethnicity group. |
| Jones et al. (2008) [ | Enzyme immunoassay assessment of blood | 8794 adults (94 % male) | For DUIDa suspects, the number of men far exceeded that of women, and women were older than the men. Blood THC concentration was higher in men than in women. |
| Khan et al. (2013) [ | Data from the National Epidemiologic Survey of Alcohol and Related Conditions 2001–2002 | 3297 US adults diagnosed with lifetime CUD (63 % male) | Women with CUD presented more mood and anxiety disorders and had an increased risk for externalizing disorders. Men with CUD had an increased risk of being diagnosed with an SUD, antisocial personality disorder, or a psychiatric disorder. Men with CUD were older at remission, used more joints, and reported more CUD symptoms than women. |
| Lisdahl and Price (2012) [ | Neuropsychological tests | 23 marijuana users (44 % male) vs. 35 controls (50 % male) | Female users were found to have an earlier age of onset for regular marijuana use. Male users also demonstrated a stronger relationship between both poor sequencing ability, psychomotor speed, and increased marijuana use, even though both male and female users had similar levels of past year marijuana use. |
| McDonald et al. (2003) [ | Double-blind, placebo conditions, 7.5 or 15 mg THC capsule. Stop, Go/No-Go, delay discounting, and time estimation tasks | 37 healthy recreational marijuana users (49 % male) | No significant sex differences in performance on the impulsivity measures were observed. |
| McQueeny et al. (2011) [ | Imaging: sMRI | 35 marijuana users vs. 47 controls (both groups 77 % male) | Female marijuana users had larger right amygdala volumes and more internalizing symptoms than female controls, while male users had similar volumes to male controls. For female controls and males, worse mood/anxiety was linked to smaller right amygdala volume, whereas more internalizing problems were associated with greater right amygdala volume in female marijuana users only. |
| Medina et al. (2009) [ | Imaging: MRI | 16 marijuana users (75 % male) vs. 16 controls | Female users presented more lifetime drinking episodes and symptoms of alcohol dependence. Male users showed smaller PFC volumes while female users displayed larger PFC volumes compared to their same-sex controls. |
| Noack et al. (2011) [ | Internet survey of use characteristics | 843 current cannabis-using students (70.6 % male) | Marijuana use with a water pipe was more often reported by males, while use before sleep was more often reported by females. When rating the social contexts of their marijuana use, women reported more use “with strangers” than men. |
| Pedersen et al. (2001) [ | Longitudinal study of conduct and cannabis use | 2436 adolescents (50 % male) | Conduct problems had an impact on marijuana initiation, with a noticeably stronger effect in females. For females, covert and aggressive conduct problems had robust effects, while in males, serious conduct had a moderate effect. |
| Pope et al. (1997) [ | Visuospatial memory task | 25 heavy marijuana users vs. 30 light marijuana users | Heavy marijuana-using women have impaired memory compared to light marijuana-using women, but there was no effect in men. |
| Price et al. (2015) [ | Imaging: MRI | 27 marijuana users (56 % male) vs. 32 controls (44 % male) | No significant sex interactions were found. |
| Roser et al. (2009) [ | Double-blind, placebo-controlled cross-over study: psychomotor performance using finger-tapping test series | 24 healthy volunteers (50 % male) | Males showed faster left-handed taps than females after ∆9-THC condition. Females showed greater variability in tapping speed after THC administration compared to placebo. No sex differences in the tapping frequencies under the placebo condition were found. Female subjects revealed a higher AIR-Scale score under ∆9-THC, but not under MJ extract. Overall, females performed worse than males for the left-hand tapping frequencies, demonstrated higher levels of plasma THC metabolites, and reported greater perception of intoxication compared to males. |
| Schepis et al. (2011) [ | Cross-sectional statewide survey of adolescent risk behavior | 4523 public high school students (48.2 % male) | African-American males and Caucasian females were more likely to use marijuana than their counterparts of the same race, while Asian females were less likely to use. Males with depression and anhedonia in the past year had greater odds of marijuana use in the past year as well. Overall, females also demonstrated more rapid transition from initiation to regular marijuana use. |
| Skosnik et al. (2006) [ | EEG: visual function via SSVEP | 17 marijuana users (59 % male) vs. 16 healthy drug naïve controls (38 % male) | No sex differences were observed in the marijuana group for any substance use data. A main effect of sex was observed, indicating that females displayed a larger SSVEP response. A sex-by-group interaction was observed at 18 Hz, indicating that marijuana use reduced 18 Hz spectral power in females, but not in males. Overall, these findings suggest that attention may be more impaired in male marijuana users. |
| Tu et al. (2008) [ | Cross-sectional survey conducted in 2004 | 8225 students grade 7–12 (50 % male) | Aboriginal boys but not girls were more likely to use marijuana. Marijuana use was associated with higher school grade among boys, but not girls, and girls who used marijuana were more likely to report poorer mental health than boys. |
| Wetherill et al. (2015) [ | Imaging: fMRI | 44 treatment-seeking, marijuana-dependent adults (61 % male) | Both sexes responded similarly to backward-masked marijuana cues > neutral cues, but for women, activity in the insula during this task correlated with MJ craving, while left OFC was inversely correlated with craving. For men, activity in the striatum during this task correlated with craving. |
| Zalesky et al. (2012) [ | imaging: MRI axonal fiber connectivity | 59 marijuana users (47 % male) vs. 33 matched controls (42 % male) | No significant sex differences or sex by group interactions were found. |
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