Lee Dayong, Schroeder Jennifer R, Karschner Erin L, Goodwin Robert S, Hirvonen Jussi, Gorelick David A, Huestis Marilyn A
Chemistry and Drug Metabolism, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institute of Health, Baltimore, Maryland.
Am J Addict. 2014 May-Jun;23(3):234-42. doi: 10.1111/j.1521-0391.2014.12088.x.
Chronic, frequent cannabis smokers may experience residual and offset effects, withdrawal, and craving when abstaining from the drug. We characterized the prevalence, duration, and intensity of these effects in chronic frequent cannabis smokers during abstinence on a closed research unit.
Non-treatment-seeking participants (N = 29 on admission, 66% and 34% remaining after 2 and 4 weeks) provided subjective effects data. A battery of five instruments was computer-administered daily to measure psychological, sensory, and physical symptoms associated with cannabinoid intoxication and withdrawal. Plasma and oral fluid specimens were concurrently collected and analyzed for cannabinoids. Outcome variables were evaluated as change from admission (Day 0) with regression models.
Most abstinence effects, including irritability and anxiety were greatest on Days 0-3 and decreased thereafter. Cannabis craving significantly decreased over time, whereas decreased appetite began to normalize on Day 4. Strange dreams and difficulty getting to sleep increased over time, suggesting intrinsic sleep problems in chronic cannabis smokers. Symptoms likely induced by residual drug effects were at maximum intensity on admission and positively correlated with plasma and oral fluid cannabinoid concentrations on admission but not afterward; these symptoms showed overall prevalence higher than cannabis withdrawal symptoms.
The combined influence of residual/offset drug effects, withdrawal, and craving was observed in chronic cannabis smokers during monitored abstinence. Abstinence symptoms were generally more intense in the initial phase, implying importance of early intervention in cannabis quit attempts. Sleep disturbance persisting for an extended period suggests that hypnotic medications could be beneficial in treating cannabis dependence.
长期频繁吸食大麻者在戒毒时可能会出现残留效应、抵消效应、戒断反应和渴望感。我们在一个封闭的研究单位中,对长期频繁吸食大麻者戒毒期间这些效应的发生率、持续时间和强度进行了描述。
不寻求治疗的参与者(入院时N = 29人,2周和4周后分别剩余66%和34%)提供主观效应数据。每天通过计算机使用一套五种工具来测量与大麻素中毒和戒断相关的心理、感官和身体症状。同时采集血浆和口腔液样本并分析其中的大麻素。通过回归模型将结局变量评估为与入院时(第0天)相比的变化。
大多数戒断效应,包括易怒和焦虑,在第0 - 3天最为严重,之后逐渐减轻。随着时间的推移,大麻渴望感显著降低,而食欲下降在第4天开始恢复正常。奇怪的梦境和入睡困难随着时间的推移而增加,这表明长期吸食大麻者存在内在的睡眠问题。可能由残留药物效应引起的症状在入院时强度最大,且与入院时血浆和口腔液中的大麻素浓度呈正相关,但之后并非如此;这些症状的总体发生率高于大麻戒断症状。
在监测的戒毒期间,观察到了长期频繁吸食大麻者残留/抵消药物效应、戒断反应和渴望感的综合影响。戒断症状在初始阶段通常更为强烈,这意味着在尝试戒除大麻时早期干预很重要。持续较长时间的睡眠障碍表明催眠药物可能有助于治疗大麻依赖。