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Canna~Fangled Abstracts

Acute and non-acute Effects of Cannabis on Human Memory Function: a Critical Review of Neuroimaging Studies.

By July 9, 2013No Comments
pm2 [Epub ahead of print]

Acute and non-acute Effects of Cannabis on Human Memory Function: a Critical Review of Neuroimaging Studies.

Source

Institute of Psychiatry Department of Psychosis Studies (PO67) King’s College London 16 De Crespigny Park London SE5 8AF United Kingdom. matthijs.bossong@kcl.ac.uk.

Abstract

Smoking cannabis produces a diverse range of effects, including impairments in learning and memory. These effects are exerted through action on the endocannabinoid system, which suggests involvement of this system in human cognition. Learning and memory deficits are core symptoms of psychiatric and neurological disorders such as schizophrenia and Alzheimer’s disease, and may also be related to endocannabinoid dysfunction in these disorders. However, before new research can focus on potential treatments that work by manipulating the endocannabinoid system, it needs to be elucidated how this system is involved in symptoms of psychiatric disorders. Here we review neuroimaging studies that investigated acute and non-acute effects of cannabis on human learning and memory function, both in adults and in adolescents. Overall, results of these studies show that cannabis use is associated with a pattern of increased activity and a higher level of deactivation in different memory-related areas. This could reflect either increased neural effort (‘neurophysiological inefficiency’) or a change in strategy to maintain good task performance. However, the interpretation of these findings is significantly hampered by large differences between study populations in cannabis use in terms of frequency, age of onset, and time that subjects were abstinent from cannabis. Future neuroimaging studies should take these limitations into account, and should focus on the potential of cannabinoid compounds for treatment of cognitive symptoms in psychiatric disorders.
PMID:

 

23829369

 

[PubMed – as supplied by publisher]
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