A systematic review of neuroimaging and acute cannabis exposure in age-of-risk for psychosis

Abstract Acute exposure to cannabis has been associated with an array of cognitive alterations, increased risk for neuropsychiatric illness, and other neuropsychiatric sequelae including the emergence of acute psychotic symptoms. However, the brain alterations associating cannabis use and these beha...

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Main Authors: Lani Cupo, Eric Plitman, Elisa Guma, M. Mallar Chakravarty
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-04-01
Series:Translational Psychiatry
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-021-01295-w
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spelling doaj-dea87ea060c54912a31281332d7c49b92021-04-18T11:49:51ZengNature Publishing GroupTranslational Psychiatry2158-31882021-04-0111111910.1038/s41398-021-01295-wA systematic review of neuroimaging and acute cannabis exposure in age-of-risk for psychosisLani Cupo0Eric Plitman1Elisa Guma2M. Mallar Chakravarty3Integrated Program in Neuroscience, McGill UniversityComputational Brain Anatomy (CoBrA) Laboratory, Cerebral Imaging Center, Douglas Research Centre VerdunIntegrated Program in Neuroscience, McGill UniversityIntegrated Program in Neuroscience, McGill UniversityAbstract Acute exposure to cannabis has been associated with an array of cognitive alterations, increased risk for neuropsychiatric illness, and other neuropsychiatric sequelae including the emergence of acute psychotic symptoms. However, the brain alterations associating cannabis use and these behavioral and clinical phenotypes remains disputed. To this end, neuroimaging can be a powerful technique to non-invasively study the impact of cannabis exposure on brain structure and function in both humans and animal models. While chronic exposure studies provide insight into how use may be related to long-term outcomes, acute exposure may reveal interesting information regarding the immediate impact of use and abuse on brain circuits. Understanding these alterations could reveal the connection with symptom dimensions in neuropsychiatric disorders and, more specifically with psychosis. The purpose of the present review is to: 1) provide an update on the findings of pharmacological neuroimaging studies examining the effects of administered cannabinoids and 2) focus the discussion on studies that examine the sensitive window for the emergence of psychosis. Current literature indicates that cannabis exposure has varied effects on the brain, with the principal compounds in cannabis (delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol and cannabidiol) altering activity across different brain regions. Importantly, we also discovered critical gaps in the literature, particularly regarding sex-dependent responses and long-term effects of chronic exposure. Certain networks often characterized as dysregulated in psychosis, like the default mode network and limbic system, were also impacted by THC exposure, identifying areas of particular interest for future work investigating the potential relationship between the two.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-021-01295-w
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lani Cupo
Eric Plitman
Elisa Guma
M. Mallar Chakravarty
spellingShingle Lani Cupo
Eric Plitman
Elisa Guma
M. Mallar Chakravarty
A systematic review of neuroimaging and acute cannabis exposure in age-of-risk for psychosis
Translational Psychiatry
author_facet Lani Cupo
Eric Plitman
Elisa Guma
M. Mallar Chakravarty
author_sort Lani Cupo
title A systematic review of neuroimaging and acute cannabis exposure in age-of-risk for psychosis
title_short A systematic review of neuroimaging and acute cannabis exposure in age-of-risk for psychosis
title_full A systematic review of neuroimaging and acute cannabis exposure in age-of-risk for psychosis
title_fullStr A systematic review of neuroimaging and acute cannabis exposure in age-of-risk for psychosis
title_full_unstemmed A systematic review of neuroimaging and acute cannabis exposure in age-of-risk for psychosis
title_sort systematic review of neuroimaging and acute cannabis exposure in age-of-risk for psychosis
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Translational Psychiatry
issn 2158-3188
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Abstract Acute exposure to cannabis has been associated with an array of cognitive alterations, increased risk for neuropsychiatric illness, and other neuropsychiatric sequelae including the emergence of acute psychotic symptoms. However, the brain alterations associating cannabis use and these behavioral and clinical phenotypes remains disputed. To this end, neuroimaging can be a powerful technique to non-invasively study the impact of cannabis exposure on brain structure and function in both humans and animal models. While chronic exposure studies provide insight into how use may be related to long-term outcomes, acute exposure may reveal interesting information regarding the immediate impact of use and abuse on brain circuits. Understanding these alterations could reveal the connection with symptom dimensions in neuropsychiatric disorders and, more specifically with psychosis. The purpose of the present review is to: 1) provide an update on the findings of pharmacological neuroimaging studies examining the effects of administered cannabinoids and 2) focus the discussion on studies that examine the sensitive window for the emergence of psychosis. Current literature indicates that cannabis exposure has varied effects on the brain, with the principal compounds in cannabis (delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol and cannabidiol) altering activity across different brain regions. Importantly, we also discovered critical gaps in the literature, particularly regarding sex-dependent responses and long-term effects of chronic exposure. Certain networks often characterized as dysregulated in psychosis, like the default mode network and limbic system, were also impacted by THC exposure, identifying areas of particular interest for future work investigating the potential relationship between the two.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-021-01295-w
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