A preliminary DTI study showing no brain structural change associated with adolescent cannabis use

Most recent entries

  • A preliminary DTI study showing no brain structural change associated with adolescent cannabis use

Archives

  • May 2006

A preliminary DTI study showing no brain structural change associated with adolescent cannabis use

Lynn E DeLisi, Hilary C Bertisch, Kamila U Szulc, Magda Majcher, Kyle Brown, Arthika Bappal, Babak A Ardekani Tuesday, May 9th, 2006 Posted in Articles, English

Abstract

Analyses were performed on brain MRI scans from individuals who were frequent cannabis users (N = 10; 9 males, 1 female, mean age 21.1 ± 2.9, range: 18?27) in adolescence and similar age and sex matched young adults who never used cannabis (N = 10; 9 males, 1 female, mean age of 23.0 ± 4.4, range: 17?30). Cerebral atrophy and white matter integrity were determined using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) to quantify the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) and the fractional anisotropy (FA). Whole brain volumes, lateral ventricular volumes, and gray matter volumes of the amygdala-hippocampal complex, superior temporal gyrus, and entire temporal lobes (excluding the amygdala-hippocampal complex) were also measured. While differences existed between groups, no pattern consistent with evidence of cerebral atrophy or loss of white matter integrity was detected. It is concluded that frequent cannabis use is unlikely to be neurotoxic to the normal developing adolescent brain.

Full text | Read the complete article »

Recent Comments

Meta

  • Log in

About | Terms of Use | Privacy | harmreductionjournal.com

Creative Commons License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

Built by the Center for Digital Research and Scholarship.