Hunault Claudine C, Mensinga Tjeert T, Böcker Koen B E, Schipper C Maarten A, Kruidenier Maaike, Leenders Marianne E C, de Vries Irma, Meulenbelt Jan
National Poisons Information Center, National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, Bilthoven, The Netherlands.
Psychopharmacology (Berl). 2009 May;204(1):85-94. doi: 10.1007/s00213-008-1440-0. Epub 2008 Dec 20.
Delta(9)-Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) is the main active constituent of cannabis. In recent years, the average THC content of some cannabis cigarettes has increased up to approximately 60 mg per cigarette (20% THC cigarettes). Acute cognitive and psychomotor effects of THC among recreational users after smoking cannabis cigarettes containing such high doses are unknown.
The objective of this study was to study the dose-effect relationship between the THC dose contained in cannabis cigarettes and cognitive and psychomotor effects for THC doses up to 69.4 mg (23%).
This double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomised, four-way cross-over study included 24 non-daily male cannabis users (two to nine cannabis cigarettes per month). Participants smoked four cannabis cigarettes containing 0, 29.3, 49.1 and 69.4 mg THC on four exposure days.
The THC dose in smoked cannabis was linearly associated with a slower response time in all tasks (simple reaction time, visuo-spatial selective attention, sustained attention, divided attention and short-term memory tasks) and motor control impairment in the motor control task. The number of errors increased significantly with increasing doses in the short-term memory and the sustained attention tasks. Some participants showed no impairment in motor control even at THC serum concentrations higher than 40 ng/mL. High feeling and drowsiness differed significantly between treatments.
Response time slowed down and motor control worsened, both linearly, with increasing THC doses. Consequently, cannabis with high THC concentrations may be a concern for public health and safety if cannabis smokers are unable to titrate to a high feeling corresponding to a desired plasma THC level.
Δ⁹-四氢大麻酚(THC)是大麻的主要活性成分。近年来,一些大麻卷烟的平均THC含量已增至每支约60毫克(THC含量为20%的卷烟)。吸食含有如此高剂量THC的大麻卷烟后,娱乐性使用者中THC的急性认知和精神运动效应尚不清楚。
本研究的目的是研究大麻卷烟中THC剂量与高达69.4毫克(23%)的THC剂量的认知和精神运动效应之间的剂量-效应关系。
这项双盲、安慰剂对照、随机、四向交叉研究纳入了24名非每日吸食大麻的男性(每月吸食两至九支大麻卷烟)。参与者在四个暴露日分别吸食四支含有0、29.3、49.1和69.4毫克THC的大麻卷烟。
吸食大麻中的THC剂量与所有任务(简单反应时间、视觉空间选择性注意力、持续注意力、分散注意力和短期记忆任务)中较慢的反应时间以及运动控制任务中的运动控制受损呈线性相关。在短期记忆和持续注意力任务中,错误数量随剂量增加而显著增加。一些参与者即使在THC血清浓度高于40纳克/毫升时,运动控制也未受损。不同处理之间的兴奋感和嗜睡感差异显著。
随着THC剂量增加,反应时间减慢,运动控制恶化,二者均呈线性关系。因此,如果大麻吸食者无法调整到与期望的血浆THC水平相对应的兴奋感,那么高THC浓度的大麻可能会对公众健康和安全造成影响。