University of Wollongong
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Functional connectivity in brain networks underlying cognitive control in chronic cannabis users

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posted on 2024-11-16, 07:04 authored by Ian H Harding, Nadia SolowijNadia Solowij, Ben J Harrison, Michael Takagi, Valentina Lorenzetti, Dan I Lubman, Marc L Seal, Christos Pantelis, Murat Yucel
The long-term effect of regular cannabis use on brain function underlying cognitive control remains equivocal. Cognitive control abilities are thought to have a major role in everyday functioning, and their dysfunction has been implicated in the maintenance of maladaptive drug-taking patterns. In this study, the Multi-Source Interference Task was employed alongside functional magnetic resonance imaging and psychophysiological interaction methods to investigate functional interactions between brain regions underlying cognitive control. Current cannabis users with a history of greater than 10 years of daily or near-daily cannabis smoking (n=21) were compared with age, gender, and IQ-matched non-using controls (n=21). No differences in behavioral performance or magnitude of task-related brain activations were evident between the groups. However, greater connectivity between the prefrontal cortex and the occipitoparietal cortex was evident in cannabis users, as compared with controls, as cognitive control demands increased. The magnitude of this connectivity was positively associated with age of onset and lifetime exposure to cannabis. These findings suggest that brain regions responsible for coordinating behavioral control have an increased influence on the direction and switching of attention in cannabis users, and that these changes may have a compensatory role in mitigating cannabis-related impairments in cognitive control or perceptual processes.

Funding

Characterization of nutritional status, evolution and effectiveness of an intervention with omega-3 in postpartum women

Coordenação de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior

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Cannabis and the brain: the good, the bad and the unknown

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Harding, I. H., Solowij, N., Harrison, B. J., Takagi, M., Lorenzetti, V., Lubman, D. I., Seal, M. L., Pantelis, C. & Yucel, M. (2012). Functional connectivity in brain networks underlying cognitive control in chronic cannabis users. Neuropsychopharmacology, 37 (8), 1923-1933.

Journal title

Neuropsychopharmacology

Volume

37

Issue

8

Pagination

1923-1933

Language

English

RIS ID

59477

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