Nosko Lilith, Crocker Candice E, Tibbo Phil G
Department of Psychiatry, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada.
Research and Innovation, Nova Scotia Health Authority, Halifax, NS, Canada.
Front Psychiatry. 2025 Sep 3;16:1644105. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2025.1644105. eCollection 2025.
Adolescence and young adulthood are simultaneously periods of significant brain development and the ages in which people often initiate cannabis use. This has led to significant interest in researching the effects that cannabis use in this period might have on the brains of users. This scoping review aims to summarize existing neuroimaging research on the effect of cannabis use in adolescence and/or young adulthood (ages 14-25) on brain structure, function, and metabolite concentrations.
Following scoping review methodology, databases containing neuroimaging studies assessing the effects of cannabis use between the ages of 14 and 25 on brain structure, function, and metabolite concentrations were searched.
Our search yielded 3901 sources, of which 99 met inclusion criteria. The majority of included papers (84/99) found differences in the brain structure, function, and/or metabolite concentrations of adolescent/young adult cannabis users compared to non-using controls. Fewer studies explicitly assessed sex/gender differences, with 5 finding that sex/gender influenced the effect of cannabis use on the brain.
Based on the findings of this review, there is considerable evidence to suggest that cannabis use in adolescence/young adulthood causes changes in the brains of users, however, the low quality of relevant research and scarcity of long term follow up studies, in addition to the heterogeneity of the existing research suggests that more work needs to be done to understand this relationship.
青春期和青年期是大脑显著发育的时期,同时也是人们常常开始使用大麻的年龄段。这引发了对研究该时期使用大麻可能对使用者大脑产生的影响的浓厚兴趣。本综述旨在总结现有的关于青春期和/或青年期(14至25岁)使用大麻对大脑结构、功能和代谢物浓度影响的神经影像学研究。
按照综述方法,检索了包含评估14至25岁使用大麻对大脑结构、功能和代谢物浓度影响的神经影像学研究的数据库。
我们的检索得到3901个来源,其中99个符合纳入标准。大多数纳入论文(84/99)发现,与未使用大麻的对照组相比,青少年/青年大麻使用者的大脑结构、功能和/或代谢物浓度存在差异。明确评估性别差异的研究较少,有5项研究发现性别会影响使用大麻对大脑的作用。
基于本综述的结果,有大量证据表明青春期/青年期使用大麻会导致使用者大脑发生变化,然而,相关研究质量较低、长期随访研究稀缺,以及现有研究的异质性表明,需要开展更多工作来理解这种关系。