De Sousa Fernandes Perna E B, Theunissen E L, Kuypers K P C, Toennes S W, Ramaekers J G
Department Neuropsychology and Psychopharmacology, Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience, Maastricht University, P.O. Box 616, 6200 MD, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
Department of Forensic Toxicology, Institute of Legal Medicine, Goethe University of Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Germany.
Psychopharmacology (Berl). 2016 Sep;233(18):3331-40. doi: 10.1007/s00213-016-4371-1. Epub 2016 Jul 15.
Alcohol and cannabis use have been implicated in aggression. Alcohol consumption is known to facilitate aggression, whereas a causal link between cannabis and aggression has not been clearly demonstrated.
This study investigated the acute effects of alcohol and cannabis on subjective aggression in alcohol and cannabis users, respectively, following aggression exposure. Drug-free controls served as a reference. It was hypothesized that aggression exposure would increase subjective aggression in alcohol users during alcohol intoxication, whereas it was expected to decrease subjective aggression in cannabis users during cannabis intoxication.
Heavy alcohol (n = 20) and regular cannabis users (n = 21), and controls (n = 20) were included in a mixed factorial study. Alcohol and cannabis users received single doses of alcohol and placebo or cannabis and placebo, respectively. Subjective aggression was assessed before and after aggression exposure consisting of administrations of the point-subtraction aggression paradigm (PSAP) and the single category implicit association test (SC-IAT). Testosterone and cortisol levels in response to alcohol/cannabis treatment and aggression exposure were recorded as secondary outcome measures.
Subjective aggression significantly increased following aggression exposure in all groups while being sober. Alcohol intoxication increased subjective aggression whereas cannabis decreased the subjective aggression following aggression exposure. Aggressive responses during the PSAP increased following alcohol and decreased following cannabis relative to placebo. Changes in aggressive feeling or response were not correlated to the neuroendocrine response to treatments.
It is concluded that alcohol facilitates feelings of aggression whereas cannabis diminishes aggressive feelings in heavy alcohol and regular cannabis users, respectively.
饮酒和吸食大麻与攻击性有关。已知饮酒会助长攻击性,而大麻与攻击性之间的因果关系尚未得到明确证实。
本研究分别调查了酒精和大麻对酒精使用者和大麻使用者在遭受攻击后主观攻击性的急性影响。未使用药物的对照组作为参照。研究假设为,遭受攻击会增加酒精使用者在酒精中毒期间的主观攻击性,而预计会降低大麻使用者在大麻中毒期间的主观攻击性。
一项混合因子研究纳入了重度饮酒者(n = 20)、经常吸食大麻者(n = 21)和对照组(n = 20)。酒精使用者和大麻使用者分别接受单剂量酒精和安慰剂或大麻和安慰剂。在由点减法攻击范式(PSAP)和单类别内隐联想测验(SC-IAT)组成的攻击暴露前后评估主观攻击性。记录对酒精/大麻治疗和攻击暴露的睾酮和皮质醇水平作为次要结果指标。
在所有组清醒时,遭受攻击暴露后主观攻击性显著增加。酒精中毒会增加主观攻击性,而大麻会降低遭受攻击暴露后的主观攻击性。相对于安慰剂,PSAP期间的攻击反应在饮酒后增加,在吸食大麻后减少。攻击情绪或反应的变化与对治疗的神经内分泌反应无关。
得出的结论是,酒精会助长攻击性情绪,而大麻会分别减轻重度饮酒者和经常吸食大麻者的攻击情绪。