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Gross morphological brain changes with chronic, heavy cannabis use

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 06:29 authored by Valentina Lorenzetti, Nadia SolowijNadia Solowij, Sarah Whittle, Alex Fornito, Daniel Lubman, Christos Pantelis, Murat Yücel
We investigated the morphology of multiple brain regions in a rare sample of 15 very heavy cannabis users with minimal psychiatric comorbidity or significant exposure to other substances (compared with 15 age- and IQ-matched non-cannabis-using controls) using manual techniques. Heavy cannabis users demonstrated smaller hippocampus and amygdala volumes, but no alterations of the orbitofrontal and anterior- and paracingulate cortices, or the pituitary gland. These findings indicate that chronic cannabis use has a selective and detrimental impact on the morphology of the mediotemporal lobe.

Funding

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

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Lorenzetti, V., Solowij, N., Whittle, S., Fornito, A., Lubman, D. I., Pantelis, C. & Yücel, M. (2015). Gross morphological brain changes with chronic, heavy cannabis use. British Journal of Psychiatry, 206 (1), 77-78.

Journal title

British Journal of Psychiatry

Volume

206

Issue

1

Pagination

77-78

Language

English

RIS ID

97350

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