4.7 Article

Cannabis use disrupts eyeblink conditioning: Evidence for cannabinoid modulation of cerebellar-dependent learning

Journal

NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 6, Pages 1432-1440

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/sj.npp.1301506

Keywords

THC; cannabinoid; cerebellum; eyeblink conditioning; behavior; human

Funding

  1. NIDA NIH HHS [R03 DA019630-01A1, R03 DA019630, 1 R03 DA019630-01, R21 DA023097-01A1, R21 DA023097] Funding Source: Medline

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While the cerebellum contains the highest density of cannabinoid receptor (CBI) in the brain, no studies have assessed the effect of exogenous cannabinoids on cerebellar-dependent learning in humans. The current study, therefore, examined the effect of chronic cannabis use on classical eyeblink conditioning (EBC), a cerebellar-mediated task which has been shown to be disrupted in CBI knockout mice. Chronic cannabis users (24 h abstinence before study; positive THC urine drug test) free of DSM-IV Axis-I or -II disorders, were evaluated. A delay EBC task was utilized, in which a conditioned stimulus (CS; 400 ms tone) co-terminated with a corneal air puff unconditioned stimulus (US; 50 ms), thus eliciting a conditioned blink response (CR). The cannabis group exhibited markedly fewer, and more poorly timed CRs as compared to drug-naive controls. There were no differences between the groups in either the unconditioned response (UR) or an EEG measure of selective attention to the CS (N100 auditory ERP), indicating that the disruption observed in the cannabis group was specific to CR acquisition. These results suggest that cannabis use is associated with functional deficits in the cerebellar circuitry underlying EBC, a finding which corroborates the recent work in CBI knockout mice.

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