Smoking dagga regularly can distort brain activity

05/08/2004 Marijuana was smoked freely at The Global Influence of Reggae workshop conducted by Rita Marley and Marcia Griffiths, members of The I - Threes at ther Newtown Music Hall during the Urban Voices International Arts Festival. Pic: Neo Ntsoma

05/08/2004 Marijuana was smoked freely at The Global Influence of Reggae workshop conducted by Rita Marley and Marcia Griffiths, members of The I - Threes at ther Newtown Music Hall during the Urban Voices International Arts Festival. Pic: Neo Ntsoma

Published Jun 10, 2016

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London - Smoking cannabis on a regular basis changes the brain's natural reward circuits, according to new research.

This could affect peoples' ability to make decisions and maintain relationships as their perspective on risks and rewards is altered.

Francesca Filbey, a Neuroscience expert at the Centre for BrainHealth in the US said: “This study shows that marijuana disrupts the natural reward circuitry of the brain, making marijuana highly salient to those who use it heavily. In essence, these brain alterations could be a marker of transition from recreational marijuana use to problematic use.”

It is believed that this is the first time scientists have proven it is possible to identify chronic marijuana users from how their brains respond to cannabis cues compared to natural reward cues. The research suggested it is possible to identify whether someone's drug use is recreational or problematic based on their brain activity.

As part of the study, 59 marijuana users and 70 nonusers were studied with functional magnetic resonance imaging, a procedure that uses MRI technology to measure brain activity by detecting changes in blood flow. Researchers presented both groups with visual cues associated with drug use such as bongs and joints, followed by other images such as healthy fruit.

They found that users had more brain activity in the mesocorticolimbic-reward system when shown the first set of images than non-users, suggesting that these brain alterations reveal when a person's use has crossed from recreational to potentially harmful. Research from 2014 found that among teenagers and young adults, marijuana use was more common than smoking nicotine.

Addiction rates were higher among younger age groups, with one in six teenagers who used the drug becoming dependent, compared to one in ten adults.

The Independent

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