Chabrol H, Duconge E, Roura C, Casas C
Centre d'Etudes et de Recherches en Psychopathologie, Université de Toulouse-Le Mirail, 5, allées Machado, 31058 Toulouse, France.
Encephale. 2004 Mar-Apr;30(2):141-6. doi: 10.1016/s0013-7006(04)95424-3.
The aims of this paper is to study the relations between anxious, depressive and borderline symptomatology and cannabis use and dependence in adolescents and young adults. A convenient sample of 212 subjects composed of high-school and college students from Toulouse, France (85 boys, 127 girls; mean age=18.3 1.8 Years) completed questionnaires assessing the patterns of cannabis use, age of first use, the symptoms of dependence using a questionnaire derived from the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview, and the anxious, depressive and borderline symptomatology using the STAI-YA (State-Trait Anxiety Inventory; Spielberger et al., 1970), the CES-D (Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression scale; Radloff, 1977) and the BPI (Borderline Personality Inventory; Leichsenring, 1999), respectively; 54% of subjects reported having used cannabis once during the last 6 Months (45.3% of girls and 66.6% of boys, p=0.002). Frequency of use was higher in boys: eg, 61% of boys used cannabis at least almost daily versus 31% of girls (p<0.00001). Age of first use was lower in boys than in girls (14.6 2.6 versus 15.7 2.3, t=- 2.46, p=0.02). Length of use was higher in boys than in girls (3.9 2.2 versus 3 1.6, t=2.2, p=0.03). Among users, near of 64% of boys and 36% of girls met the criteria for cannabis dependence (p=0.003). BPI, CES-D and STAI-YA scores were compared between non-users and users and between non-dependent and dependent users: the only significant differences were that BPI scores were higher in users versus non-users and in dependent users versus non-dependent users; CES-D and STAI-YA scores did not distinguished users from non-users and dependent users from non-dependent users. BPI and CES-D scores were correlated with the length of cannabis use (Pearson r=0.19 and r=0.19, respectively, p<0.05). In a multiple regression analysis predicting the frequency of cannabis use, we entered age, sex, CES-D, STAI-YA and BPI scores. This model accounted for 23% of the variance of the frequency of use (F5,206=14.4, p<0.0001). Sex, age, and BPI scores were significant predictors (b=- 0.31, t=- 5.03, p<0.0001; b=0.29, t=4.87, p<0.0001, b=0.27, t=3.80, p<0.0001, respectively). CES-D scores were a nearly significant predictor (b=- 0.17, t=- 1.96, p=0.051). STAI-YA scores were not a significant predictor (b=0.11, t=1.29, p=0.20). In a multiple regression analysis predicting the dependence scores, we entered age, sex, frequency of use, CES-D, STAI-YA and BPI scores. This model accounted for 41% of the variance of the dependence score (F6,107=12.6, p=0.005). Frequency of use and BPI scores were significant predictors (b=0.51, t=6.12, p<0.0001; b=0.26, t=2.86, p=0.005, respectively). Age, sex, CES-D and STAI-YA scores were not significant predictors (b=- 1.04, t=- 1.32, p=0.19; b=0.008, t=0.09, p=0.92; b=0.16, t=1.53, p=0.12; b=- 0.14, t=- 1.46, p=0.15, respectively). The frequency of use and dependence observed in this study confirm the results obtained in epidemiological studies of use and dependence in France. The high frequency of daily or almost daily users suggests that a high proportion of subjects were "high" while completing the questionnaires. This is a confounding variable now inevitable in epidemiological studies of cannabis use given the high proportion of daily users. The consequence may be that responses to mood questionnaire express both the acute effect of cannabis consumption and the chronic effect that might be different: the acute euphoriant effect of cannabis may mask a chronic depressive symptomatology induced by chronic cannabis consumption. The antidepressant and anti-anxiety acute effect of cannabis may explain that CES-D and STAI-YA scores did not distinguished users from non-users and dependent users from non-dependent users. The correlation between length of use and CES-D scores may reveal the depressant chronic effect of long-term use. The correlation between length of use and BPI scores suggest that long-term cannabis use induces an increase in borderline symptomatology. Results of the regression analyses suggest that the borderline symptomatology is highly linked to frequency of use and cannabis dependence. This may be due to the increase in borderline symptomatology induced by both acute and chronic effects of cannabis. The relation between cannabis use and dependence on one hand and anxious and depressive symptomatology on the other hand may have been obscured by the acute mood effect of cannabis consumption. Borderline symptomatology appeared to be highly linked to cannabis use and dependence in adolescents and young adults. Borderline personality disorder in adolescents is not the only risk factor for cannabis use and dependence in adolescents: borderline symptomatology even at a subclinical level seems to be a higher risk factor than anxious or depressive symptomatology. The frequency of daily or almost daily users may be a confounding variable for the study of relations between anxiety and depressive disorders in adolescents and young adults.
本文旨在研究青少年和青年中焦虑、抑郁及边缘性症状与大麻使用及依赖之间的关系。选取了212名来自法国图卢兹的高中生和大学生作为便利样本(85名男生,127名女生;平均年龄 = 18.3 ± 1.8岁),他们完成了多项问卷,评估大麻使用模式、首次使用年龄、使用一份源自《迷你国际神经精神访谈》的问卷来评估依赖症状,以及分别使用状态 - 特质焦虑量表(STAI - YA;Spielberger等人,1970年)、流行病学研究中心抑郁量表(CES - D;Radloff,1977年)和边缘性人格量表(BPI;Leichsenring,1999年)来评估焦虑、抑郁及边缘性症状;54%的受试者报告在过去6个月内曾使用过大麻一次(女生为45.3%,男生为66.6%,p = 0.002)。男生的使用频率更高:例如,61%的男生至少几乎每天使用大麻,而女生为31%(p < 0.00001)。男生的首次使用年龄低于女生(14.6 ± 2.6岁对15.7 ± 2.3岁,t = -2.46,p = 0.02)。男生的使用时长高于女生(3.9 ± 2.2年对3 ± 1.6年,t = 2.2,p = 0.03)。在使用者中近64%的男生和36%的女生符合大麻依赖标准(p = 0.003)。比较了非使用者与使用者之间以及非依赖使用者与依赖使用者之间的BPI、CES - D和STAI - YA得分:唯一显著差异在于使用者与非使用者之间以及依赖使用者与非依赖使用者之间BPI得分更高;CES - D和STAI - YA得分并未区分使用者与非使用者以及依赖使用者与非依赖使用者。BPI和CES - D得分与大麻使用时长相关(Pearson相关系数分别为r = 0.19和r = 0.19,p < 0.05)。在预测大麻使用频率的多元回归分析中,纳入了年龄、性别、CES - D、STAI - YA和BPI得分。该模型解释了使用频率方差的23%(F5,206 = 14.4,p < 0.0001)。性别、年龄和BPI得分是显著预测因子(b = -0.31,t = -5.03,p < 0.0001;b = 0.29,t = 4.87,p < 0.0001;b = 0.27,t = 3.80,p < 0.0001)。CES - D得分是接近显著的预测因子(b = -0.17,t = -1.96,p = 0.051)。STAI - YA得分不是显著预测因子(b = 0.11,t = 1.29,p = 0.20)。在预测依赖得分的多元回归分析中,纳入了年龄、性别、使用频率、CES - D、STAI - YA和BPI得分。该模型解释了依赖得分方差的41%(F6,107 = 12.6,p = 0.005)。使用频率和BPI得分是显著预测因子(b = 0.51,t = 6.12,p < 0.0001;b = 0.26,t = 2.86,p = 0.005)。年龄、性别、CES - D和STAI - YA得分不是显著预测因子(b = -1.04,t = -1.32,p = 0.19;b = 0.008,t = 0.09,p = 0.92;b = 0.16,t = 1.53,p = 0.12;b = -0.14,t = -1.46,p = 0.15)。本研究中观察到的使用频率和依赖情况证实了法国关于使用和依赖的流行病学研究结果。日常或几乎每天使用者的高频率表明,在完成问卷时,相当比例的受试者处于“兴奋”状态。鉴于日常使用者的高比例,这在大麻使用的流行病学研究中是一个不可避免的混杂变量。其后果可能是,对情绪问卷的回答既表达了大麻消费的急性效应,也表达了可能不同的慢性效应:大麻的急性欣快效应可能掩盖了慢性大麻消费引起的慢性抑郁症状。大麻的抗抑郁和抗焦虑急性效应可能解释了CES - D和STAI - YA得分未区分使用者与非使用者以及依赖使用者与非依赖使用者的原因。使用时长与CES - D得分之间的相关性可能揭示了长期使用的抑制慢性效应。使用时长与BPI得分之间的相关性表明,长期大麻使用会导致边缘性症状增加。回归分析结果表明,边缘性症状与使用频率和大麻依赖高度相关。这可能是由于大麻的急性和慢性效应均导致边缘性症状增加。大麻使用及依赖与焦虑和抑郁症状之间的关系可能因大麻消费的急性情绪效应而被掩盖。边缘性症状在青少年和青年中似乎与大麻使用及依赖高度相关。青少年边缘性人格障碍并非青少年大麻使用及依赖的唯一风险因素:即使是亚临床水平的边缘性症状似乎也是比焦虑或抑郁症状更高的风险因素。日常或几乎每天使用者的频率可能是研究青少年和青年焦虑与抑郁障碍之间关系的一个混杂变量。