Schizophrenia

International Review of Neurobiology 
Volume 78, 2007, Pages 289-326 
Integrating the Neurobiology of Schizophrenia

Abstract Full Text + Links PDF (450 K)

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doi:10.1016/S0074-7742(06)78010-2    icon_doi   
Copyright © 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Cannabinoids and Psychosis

Deepak Cyril D'Souzaa 
aDepartment of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, VA Connecticut Healthcare System, West-Haven, Connecticut 06516, USA 

Available online 8 March 2007. 

Recent epidemiological studies and advances in understanding of brain cannabinoid function have renewed interest in the long-recognized association between cannabinoids and psychosis. This chapter presents evidence supporting and refuting the association between cannabinoids and psychosis. Cannabinoids can induce acute transient psychotic symptoms or an acute psychosis in some individuals. What makes some individuals vulnerable to cannabinoid-related psychosis is unclear. Also clear is that cannabinoids can also exacerbate psychosis in individuals with an established psychotic disorder, and these exacerbations may last beyond the period of intoxication. Less clear is whether cannabis causes a persistent de novo psychosis. The available evidence meets many but not all the criteria for causality, including dose–response, temporality, direction, specificity, and biological plausibility. On the other hand, the large majority of individuals exposed to cannabinoids do not experience psychosis or develop schizophrenia and the rates of schizophrenia have not increased commensurate with the increase in rates of cannabis use. Similar to smoking and lung cancer, it is more likely that cannabis exposure is a component cause that interacts with other factors, for example, genetic risk, to “cause” schizophrenia. Nevertheless, in the absence of known causes of schizophrenia, the role of component causes such as cannabis exposure (exogenous hypothesis) is important and warrants further study. There is also tantalizing evidence from postmortem, neurochemical, and genetic studies suggesting CB1 receptor dysfunction (endogenous hypothesis) in schizophrenia that warrants further investigation. Further work is necessary to identify those factors that place individuals at higher risk for cannabinoid-related psychosis, to identify the biological mechanisms underlying the risks and to further study whether CB1 receptor dysfunction contributes to the pathophysiology of psychotic disorders.



International Review of Neurobiology 
Volume 78, 2007, Pages 289-326 
Integrating the Neurobiology of Schizophrenia





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May 2007, 20:3 > Cannabis use and psychiatric and...
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Cannabis use and psychiatric and cogitive disorders: the chicken or the egg?. 

Addictive disorders

Current Opinion in Psychiatry. 20(3):228-234, May 2007.
Di Forti, Marta a; Morrison, Paul D a; Butt, Alexander b; Murray, Robin M c

Abstract: 
Purpose of review: Cannabis is the world's most commonly used illicit drug. In this review, we consider the recent literature on the effects of cannabis on mental health and on cognition.

Recent findings: Cannabis use in adolescence increases the risk of later schizophrenia-like psychoses, especially in genetically vulnerable individuals. Not surprisingly, patients already suffering from psychosis who use cannabis have a worse outcome than those who do not. These effects of cannabis may be consequent on its impact on the dopamine system. There is less evidence of cannabis playing an aetiological role in other mental disorders including depression, but there have been far fewer studies. Heavy cannabis use has also been shown to affect memory and learning performance, both in healthy individuals and in patients suffering from psychosis. Combined cognitive-behavioural therapy and motivational interviewing seems a promising psychological intervention to achieve a cessation of cannabis use in patients suffering from schizophrenia.

Summary: Further research is needed to understand the biological mechanisms underlying the effects of cannabis on mental health, but intervention strategies to help patients abstain should currently be implemented in psychiatric services, and public education campaigns should be directed at increasing awareness of the health risks of cannabis.

(C) 2007 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.


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