학술논문

Reversible and regionally selective downregulation of brain cannabinoid CB1 receptors in chronic daily cannabis smokers.
Document Type
Article
Source
Molecular Psychiatry. Jun2012, Vol. 17 Issue 6, p642-649. 8p.
Subject
*CANNABIS (Genus)
*SMOKING
*DRUG addiction
*CANNABINOIDS
*TEMPERANCE
*POSITRON emission tomography
Language
ISSN
1359-4184
Abstract
Chronic cannabis (marijuana, hashish) smoking can result in dependence. Rodent studies show reversible downregulation of brain cannabinoid CB1 (cannabinoid receptor type 1) receptors after chronic exposure to cannabis. However, whether downregulation occurs in humans who chronically smoke cannabis is unknown. Here we show, using positron emission tomography imaging, reversible and regionally selective downregulation of brain cannabinoid CB1 receptors in human subjects who chronically smoke cannabis. Downregulation correlated with years of cannabis smoking and was selective to cortical brain regions. After ∼4 weeks of continuously monitored abstinence from cannabis on a secure research unit, CB1 receptor density returned to normal levels. This is the first direct demonstration of cortical cannabinoid CB1 receptor downregulation as a neuroadaptation that may promote cannabis dependence in human brain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]