Cognitive functioning of long-term heavy cannabis users seeking treatment
- PMID: 11879109
- DOI: 10.1001/jama.287.9.1123
Cognitive functioning of long-term heavy cannabis users seeking treatment
Erratum in
- JAMA2002 Apr 3;287(13):1651
Abstract
Context: Cognitive impairments are associated with long-term cannabis use, but the parameters of use that contribute to impairments and the nature and endurance of cognitive dysfunction remain uncertain.
Objective: To examine the effects of duration of cannabis use on specific areas of cognitive functioning among users seeking treatment for cannabis dependence.
Design, setting, and participants: Multisite retrospective cross-sectional neuropsychological study conducted in the United States (Seattle, Wash; Farmington, Conn; and Miami, Fla) between 1997 and 2000 among 102 near-daily cannabis users (51 long-term users: mean, 23.9 years of use; 51 shorter-term users: mean, 10.2 years of use) compared with 33 nonuser controls.
Main outcome measures: Measures from 9 standard neuropsychological tests that assessed attention, memory, and executive functioning, and were administered prior to entry to a treatment program and following a median 17-hour abstinence.
Results: Long-term cannabis users performed significantly less well than shorter-term users and controls on tests of memory and attention. On the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test, long-term users recalled significantly fewer words than either shorter-term users (P =.001) or controls (P =.005); there was no difference between shorter-term users and controls. Long-term users showed impaired learning (P =.007), retention (P =.003), and retrieval (P =.002) compared with controls. Both user groups performed poorly on a time estimation task (P<.001 vs controls). Performance measures often correlated significantly with the duration of cannabis use, being worse with increasing years of use, but were unrelated to withdrawal symptoms and persisted after controlling for recent cannabis use and other drug use.
Conclusions: These results confirm that long-term heavy cannabis users show impairments in memory and attention that endure beyond the period of intoxication and worsen with increasing years of regular cannabis use.
Comment in
-
Cannabis, cognition, and residual confounding.JAMA. 2002 Mar 6;287(9):1172-4. doi: 10.1001/jama.287.9.1172. JAMA. 2002. PMID: 11879116 No abstract available.
-
Does marijuana use cause long-term cognitive deficits?JAMA. 2002 May 22-29;287(20):2652; author reply 2652-3. doi: 10.1001/jama.287.20.2652. JAMA. 2002. PMID: 12020293 No abstract available.
-
Does marijuana use cause long-term cognitive deficits?JAMA. 2002 May 22-29;287(20):2652; author reply 2652-3. JAMA. 2002. PMID: 12020294 No abstract available.
-
Does marijuana use cause long-term cognitive deficits?JAMA. 2002 May 22-29;287(20):2652; author reply 2652-3. JAMA. 2002. PMID: 12020295 No abstract available.
-
Does marijuana use cause long-term cognitive deficits?JAMA. 2002 May 22-29;287(20):2653-4; author reply 2654. JAMA. 2002. PMID: 12020296 No abstract available.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
Medical