Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10298665 | European Neuropsychopharmacology | 2015 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Relative to placebo, delta-9-THC caused transient psychotic symptoms, anxiety, intoxication and sedation, inhibition errors and impaired inhibition efficiency. Severity of psychotic symptoms was directly correlated with inhibition error frequency and inversely with inhibition efficiency under the influence of delta-9-THC. Delta-9-THC attenuated left inferior frontal activation which was inversely correlated with the frequency of inhibition errors and severity of psychotic symptoms and positively with inhibition efficiency under its influence. These results provide experimental evidence that impairments in cognitive processes involved in the inhibitory control of thoughts and actions and inferior frontal function under the influence of cannabis may have a role in the emergence of transient psychotic symptoms under its influence.
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Authors
Sagnik Bhattacharyya, Z. Atakan, R. Martin-Santos, J.A. Crippa, J. Kambeitz, S. Malhi, V. Giampietro, S. Williams, M. Brammer, K. Rubia, D.A. Collier, P.K. McGuire,