Institute for Human Neuroscience, Boys Town National Research Hospital, Boys Town, NE, USA.
Department of Psychology and Brain Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH, USA.
J Psychopharmacol. 2024 Aug;38(8):724-734. doi: 10.1177/02698811241265764. Epub 2024 Aug 1.
Cannabis is the most widely used psychoactive drug in the United States. While multiple studies have associated acute cannabis consumption with alterations in cognitive function (e.g., visual and spatial attention), far less is known regarding the effects of chronic consumption on the neural dynamics supporting these cognitive functions.
We used magnetoencephalography (MEG) and an established visuospatial processing task to elicit multi-spectral neuronal responses in 44 regular cannabis users and 53 demographically matched non-user controls. To examine the effects of chronic cannabis use on the oscillatory dynamics underlying visuospatial processing, neural responses were imaged using a time-frequency resolved beamformer and compared across groups.
Neuronal oscillations serving visuospatial processing were identified in the theta (4-8 Hz), alpha (8-14 Hz), and gamma range (56-76 Hz), and these were imaged and examined for group differences. Our key results indicated that users exhibited weaker theta oscillations in occipital and cerebellar regions and weaker gamma responses in the left temporal cortices compared to non-users. Lastly, alpha oscillations did not differ, but alpha connectivity among higher-order attention areas was weaker in cannabis users relative to non-users and correlated with performance.
Overall, these results suggest that chronic cannabis users have alterations in the oscillatory dynamics and neural connectivity serving visuospatial attention. Such alterations were observed across multiple cortical areas critical for higher-order processing and may reflect compensatory activity and/or the initial emergence of aberrant dynamics. Future work is needed to fully understand the implications of altered multispectral oscillations and neural connectivity in cannabis users.
大麻是美国使用最广泛的精神活性药物。虽然多项研究表明急性大麻消费会改变认知功能(例如视觉和空间注意力),但对于慢性消费对支持这些认知功能的神经动力学的影响知之甚少。
我们使用脑磁图(MEG)和一个已建立的视觉空间处理任务来引发 44 名经常使用大麻的人和 53 名在人口统计学上匹配的非使用者的多谱神经元反应。为了研究慢性大麻使用对视觉空间处理基础的振荡动力学的影响,使用时频分辨波束形成器对神经反应进行成像,并在组间进行比较。
在 theta(4-8 Hz)、alpha(8-14 Hz)和 gamma 范围内(56-76 Hz)识别出了用于视觉空间处理的神经元振荡,并且对这些振荡进行了成像并检查了组间差异。我们的主要结果表明,与非使用者相比,使用者在枕叶和小脑区域的 theta 振荡较弱,在左颞叶皮质的 gamma 反应较弱。最后,alpha 振荡没有差异,但大麻使用者的高级注意力区域之间的 alpha 连接较弱,与表现相关。
总体而言,这些结果表明慢性大麻使用者在视觉空间注意力的振荡动力学和神经连接方面存在改变。这些改变在多个对高阶处理至关重要的皮质区域中都有观察到,可能反映了代偿性活动和/或异常动力学的初始出现。需要进一步的研究来充分了解大麻使用者改变的多谱振荡和神经连接的意义。