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Neuroanatomical alterations in people with high and low cannabis dependence

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 03:12 authored by Valentina Lorenzetti, Yann Chye, Chao Suo, Mark Walterfang, Daniel Lubman, Michael Takagi, Sarah Whittle, Antonio Verdejo-Garcia, Janna Cousijn, Christos Pantelis, Marc Seal, Alex Fornito, Murat Yucel, Nadia SolowijNadia Solowij
Objectives: We aimed to investigate whether severity of cannabis dependence is associated with the neuroanatomy of key brain regions of the stress and reward brain circuits. Methods: To examine dependence-specific regional brain alterations, we compared the volumes of regions relevant to reward and stress, between high-dependence cannabis users (CD+, n = 25), low-dependence cannabis users (CD−, n = 20) and controls (n = 37). Results: Compared to CD− and/or controls, the CD+ group had lower cerebellar white matter and hippocampal volumes, and deflation of the right hippocampus head and tail. Conclusion: These findings provide initial support for neuroadaptations involving stress and reward circuits that are specific to high-dependence cannabis users.

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

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Citation

Lorenzetti, V., Chye, Y., Suo, C., Walterfang, M., Lubman, D. I., Takagi, M., Whittle, S., Verdejo-Garcia, A., Cousijn, J., Pantelis, C., Seal, M., Fornito, A., Yucel, M. & Solowij, N. (2020). Neuroanatomical alterations in people with high and low cannabis dependence. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 54 (1), 68-75.

Journal title

Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry

Volume

54

Issue

1

Pagination

68-75

Language

English

RIS ID

137790

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