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Current Opinion in Psychiatry:
March 2008 - Volume 21 - Issue 2 - p 140-150
doi: 10.1097/YCO.0b013e3282f51266
Schizophrenia: Edited by W. Wolfgang Fleischhacker and Lynn E. DeLisi

The effect of cannabis on the brain: can it cause brain anomalies that lead to increased risk for schizophrenia?

DeLisi, Lynn E

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Abstract

Purpose of review: This review explores what is known about the association of cannabis with schizophrenia, its effects on the brain, and whether the brain changes known to be present in schizophrenia could be caused by cannabis and thus lead to a psychosis.

Recent findings: The heavy use of cannabis is known to be associated with some adverse consequences, such as the occurrence of acute psychotic episodes and the development of chronic schizophrenia in some people even after its use has terminated. Recent studies have produced controversy about whether cannabis in heavy use can cause irreversible brain damage, particularly to adolescents, and thus whether a chronic psychosis could be a result of brain changes caused by cannabis.

Summary: From the evidence that exists, it appears that the above view is unlikely and that cannabis may even have benign effects on brain structure, not producing deleterious damage. Its neurochemical interactions with the dopaminergic pathway, however, may, particularly in genetically vulnerable individuals, have adverse consequences.

© 2008 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

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