Cannabis use
may influence cortical maturation in adolescent males
August 26, 2015 in Medicine &
Health / Psychology & Psychiatry
Male teens who experiment with cannabis
before age 16, and have a high genetic risk for schizophrenia, show a different
brain development trajectory than low risk peers who use cannabis.
The discovery, made from a combined
analysis of over 1,500 youth, contributes to a growing body of evidence
implicating cannabis use in adolescence and schizophrenia later in life.
The study was led by Baycrest Health Sciences' Rotman Research Institute
in Toronto and is reported in JAMA Psychiatry today, ahead of
print publication.
Adolescence is a period of vulnerability with regard to the emergence of
psychotic disorders, especially in boys. Environmental influences on the
continuing maturation of neural circuits during adolescence are of great
interest to neuroscientists and medical professionals.
"Given the solid epidemiologic evidence supporting a link between
cannabis exposure during adolescence and schizophrenia, we investigated whether
the use of cannabis during early adolescence (by 16 years of age) is associated
with variations in brain maturation as a function of genetic risk for
schizophrenia," said senior author Tomas Paus, MD, PhD, the Anne and Max
Tanenbaum Professor and Chair in Population Neuroscience at Baycrest,
University of Toronto, and the Dr. John and Consuela Phelan Scholar at Child
Mind Institute, New York.
"Our findings suggest that cannabis use might interfere with the
maturation of the cerebral cortex in male adolescents at high risk for schizophrenia
by virtue of their polygenic risk score. Their brains showed lower cortical
thickness compared with low-risk male participants and low-or-high risk female
participants who used the drug."
Dr. Paus, a prominent researcher and pioneer in the field of population
neuroscience, strongly cautioned that more research is needed to determine
whether lower cortical thickness actually increases the probability of
schizophrenia in at-risk males later in life.
The research team used observations from three large samples of
typically developing youth in Canada and Europe. Researchers examined data from
a total of 1,577 participants (aged 12 - 21 years, 57% male / 43% female), that
included information on cannabis use, brain imaging results, and polygenic risk
score for schizophrenia. The data came from the Saguenay Youth Study in Quebec
(Canada), the Avon Longitudinal Study of parents and Children in the U.K., and
the IMAGEN Study in the U.K., Germany, France and Ireland.
According to the National Alliance on
Mental Illness: "It is too early to classify schizophrenia as either a
neurodevelopmental (impairment of the growth and development of the brain) or a
neurodegenerative (progressive loss of structure or function of neurons)
disorder, as both seem to occur over the course of the illness. Research
strongly suggests the emergence of schizophrenia is a result of both genetic and
environmental factors."
"Brain aging is about brain
development," said Dr. Paus. "Our study shows the importance of
understanding environmental influences on the developing brain in early life as
this can have important implications for brain health through the
lifespan."
More information: JAMA Psychiatry. Published online August 26, 2015. DOI: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2015.1131
Provided by Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care
"Cannabis use may influence
cortical maturation in adolescent males" August 26, 2015
http://medicalxpress.com/news/2015-08-cannabis-cortical-maturation-adolescent-males.html
http://medicalxpress.com/news/2015-08-cannabis-cortical-maturation-adolescent-males.html
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