The
effects of chronic marijuana use on the brain may depend on age of first
use and duration of use, according to researchers at the Center for
Brain Health at The University of Texas at Dallas.
In
a paper published today in Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences (PNAS), researchers for the first time comprehensively describe
existing abnormalities in brain function and structure of long-term
marijuana users with multiple magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
techniques. Findings show chronic marijuana users have smaller brain
volume in the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), a part of the brain commonly
associated with addiction, but also increased brain connectivity.
Continue reading after the cut...
“We
have seen a steady increase in the incidence of marijuana use since
2007,” said Dr. Francesca Filbey, Director of the Cognitive Neuroscience
Research in Addictive Disorders at the Center for BrainHealth and
Associate Professor in the School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences at
The University of Texas at Dallas. “However, research on its long-term
effects remains scarce despite the changes in legislation surrounding
marijuana and the continuing conversation surrounding this relevant
public health topic.”
The research
team studied 48 adult marijuana users and 62 gender- and age-matched
non-users, accounting for potential biases such as gender, age and
ethnicity. The authors also controlled for tobacco and alcohol use. On
average, the marijuana users who participated in the study consumed the
drug three times per day. Cognitive tests show that chronic marijuana
users had lower IQ compared to age-and gender-matched controls but the
differences do not seem to be related to the brain abnormalities as no
direct correlation can be drawn between IQ deficits and OFC volume
decrease.
“What’s unique about this
work is that it combines three different MRI techniques to evaluate
different brain characteristics,” said Dr. Sina Aslan, founder and
president of Advance MRI, LLC and adjunct assistant professor at The
University of Texas at Dallas. “The results suggest increases in
connectivity, both structural and functional that may be compensating
for gray matter losses. Eventually, however, the structural connectivity
or ‘wiring’ of the brain starts degrading with prolonged marijuana
use.”
Tests reveal that earlier onset
of regular marijuana use induces greater structural and functional
connectivity. Greatest increases in connectivity appear as an individual
begins using marijuana. Findings show severity of use is directly
correlated to greater connectivity.
Although
increased structural wiring declines after six to eight years of
continued chronic use, marijuana users continue to display more intense
connectivity than healthy non-users, which may explain why chronic,
long-term users “seem to be doing just fine” despite smaller OFC brain
volumes, Filbey explained.
“To date,
existing studies on the long-term effects of marijuana on brain
structures have been largely inconclusive due to limitations in
methodologies,” said Dr. Filbey. “While our study does not conclusively
address whether any or all of the brain changes are a direct consequence
of marijuana use, these effects do suggest that these changes are
related to age of onset and duration of use.”
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