Laboratory of Neuroimaging and Genetics, Department of Psychiatry, Mood and Motor Control Laboratory, Center for Morphometric Analysis, Department of Psychiatry, and Athinoula A. Martinos Center in Biomedical Imaging, Department of Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Charlestown, Massachusetts 02129, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, and Warren Wright Adolescent Center, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois 06011.
J Neurosci. 2014 Apr 16;34(16):5529-38. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4745-13.2014.
Marijuana is the most commonly used illicit drug in the United States, but little is known about its effects on the human brain, particularly on reward/aversion regions implicated in addiction, such as the nucleus accumbens and amygdala. Animal studies show structural changes in brain regions such as the nucleus accumbens after exposure to Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol, but less is known about cannabis use and brain morphometry in these regions in humans. We collected high-resolution MRI scans on young adult recreational marijuana users and nonusing controls and conducted three independent analyses of morphometry in these structures: (1) gray matter density using voxel-based morphometry, (2) volume (total brain and regional volumes), and (3) shape (surface morphometry). Gray matter density analyses revealed greater gray matter density in marijuana users than in control participants in the left nucleus accumbens extending to subcallosal cortex, hypothalamus, sublenticular extended amygdala, and left amygdala, even after controlling for age, sex, alcohol use, and cigarette smoking. Trend-level effects were observed for a volume increase in the left nucleus accumbens only. Significant shape differences were detected in the left nucleus accumbens and right amygdala. The left nucleus accumbens showed salient exposure-dependent alterations across all three measures and an altered multimodal relationship across measures in the marijuana group. These data suggest that marijuana exposure, even in young recreational users, is associated with exposure-dependent alterations of the neural matrix of core reward structures and is consistent with animal studies of changes in dendritic arborization.
大麻是美国最常用的非法药物,但人们对其对大脑的影响知之甚少,特别是对与成瘾相关的奖赏/厌恶区域,如伏隔核和杏仁核。动物研究表明,暴露于Δ9-四氢大麻酚后,大脑区域如伏隔核会发生结构变化,但关于大麻使用和这些区域的人类大脑形态计量学知之甚少。我们收集了年轻成年娱乐性大麻使用者和非使用者的高分辨率 MRI 扫描,并对这些结构进行了三种独立的形态计量学分析:(1)基于体素的形态计量学的灰质密度,(2)体积(全脑和区域体积),和(3)形状(表面形态计量学)。灰质密度分析显示,大麻使用者的左侧伏隔核灰质密度高于对照组参与者,延伸至胼胝体下皮质、下丘脑、亚外侧扩展杏仁核和左侧杏仁核,即使在控制年龄、性别、酒精使用和吸烟后也是如此。仅观察到左侧伏隔核体积增加的趋势效应。在左侧伏隔核和右侧杏仁核检测到显著的形状差异。左侧伏隔核在所有三个测量指标上都表现出显著的暴露依赖性改变,而大麻组在测量指标之间表现出改变的多模态关系。这些数据表明,大麻暴露,即使在年轻的娱乐性使用者中,也与核心奖赏结构的神经基质的暴露依赖性改变有关,与动物研究中树突分支的变化一致。