Cannabis use and its effects on mental health have become a growing area of concern, especially when it comes to psychosis. Research suggests there is a strong link between cannabis use, psychosis symptoms, and the dopamine system in the brain. This article will explain how cannabis may affect the risk of psychosis by changing dopamine activity, focusing on cannabis and psychosis on the dopamine system and related mechanisms. If you’re worried about cannabis use or want to understand the science behind it, this guide will provide clear and useful information for you.

A recent study led by researchers at McGill University and Western University has brought some real answers to light.

Main Results

brain251. Cannabis Use Disorder Raises Dopamine Activity

People with CUD had clearly higher neuromelanin-MRI signals in the ventral SN/VTA areas of the brain. This means more long-term dopamine activity. These areas are heavily linked to how severe a person’s psychosis symptoms are.

2. Cannabis and Schizophrenia Together Don’t Just Add Up

Interestingly, those with both CUD and schizophrenia didn’t show a simple doubling of dopamine. The effect of CUD was still clear, but schizophrenia didn’t seem to add much extra. This suggests a more complicated relationship, possibly even that the brain “plates out” on dopamine activity at a particular point.

3. Long-lasting Brain Changes

Even after one year, people with CUD still had higher dopamine activity in key brain regions. This suggests brain changes from cannabis are not just a one-time spike but may last a long time, especially with ongoing use.

4. Nicotine Was Not to Blame

Though people with CUD were also more likely to smoke tobacco, the researchers checked and confirmed nicotine wasn’t causing the dopamine spike. The effect was clearly linked to cannabis use.

5. Severity Matters

The higher the neuromelanin-MRI signal, the more severe the cannabis use. This supports a “dose-response” effect, showing that heavier or more regular cannabis use has a bigger impact on the brain’s dopamine system and, in turn, the risk of psychosis.

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