Cannabis use associated with abnormal brain structure in region involved in processing facial emotion

Authored by psypost.org and submitted by mvea

Cannabis use associated with abnormal brain structure in region involved in processing facial emotion

Cannabis use is associated with reduced brain volumes in a region involved in facial emotion processing, according to a new study in Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging.

“There is a high rate of overlap between regular (at least weekly) cannabis use and mood disorders such as depression and anxiety,” said study author Kristin E. Maple, a doctoral candidate at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.

“People with depression and anxiety often have differences in brain structure in regions that process facial emotions. The current study was designed to investigate whether cannabis users (without mood or other psychiatric disorders) have similar differences in brain structure, and whether those abnormalities are related to problems processing facial emotions.”

For their study, the researchers used MRI scans to compare the brain structure of 20 cannabis users to 35 non-users. (Cannabis users were required to have at least 40 uses in the past year.) The participants also completed computerized psychological tests of facial emotion recognition.

Cannabis use was associated with smaller left rostral anterior cingulate cortex volumes, which in turn was associated with poorer accuracy on an emotion discrimination task.

“Adolescents and young adults who use cannabis weekly have abnormal brain structure in the rostral anterior cingulate cortex (rACC), a region involved in processing and regulating emotions,” Maple told PsyPost.

“These rACC structural abnormalities are related to difficulty noticing subtle differences in facial emotions, even after three weeks of abstinence from cannabis. This emotion processing deficit could be one reason why many people who regularly use cannabis also have mood disorders (e.g., depression or anxiety).”

The design of the study, however, prevents the researchers from determining the direction of causality.

“The study was cross-sectional, which means we don’t know whether abnormalities in the rACC make someone more likely to use cannabis, or whether regular cannabis use leads to abnormal rACC structure,” Maple explained.

“Longitudinal studies such as the Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development (ABCD) study are needed to determine whether regular cannabis use actually changes rACC structure, leading to problems with emotional processing.”

The study, “Anterior cingulate volume reductions in abstinent adolescent and young adult cannabis users: Association with affective processing deficits“, was authored by Kristin E. Maple, Alicia M. Thomas, Megan M. Kangiser, and Krista M. Lisdahl.

mudman13 on June 26th, 2019 at 11:39 UTC »

It's possible then that depression and anxiety can lead to cannabis self-medication which in turn also inhibits the emotional regulation part of the brain causing a double whammy effect. In terms of my experience that would make sense as cannabis always helps at first then starts to exacerbate my anxiety.

GeebusNZ on June 26th, 2019 at 06:47 UTC »

I thought it was well-recognized that marijuana isn't for teens.

Justiceforallhobos on June 26th, 2019 at 05:30 UTC »

Lot of misinformation floating around here. A few caveats to take note of before jumping to conclusions:

This finding actually accords well with the existent literature, in that adolescent-onset substance use carries meaningful implications for the maturing cerebrum. Particularly given the frontal convexity and its anterior neighbors (e.g., anterior cingulate) are the slowest to develop. Here's a scientific manuscript (Eschel et al., 2007) speaking to recruitment of frontal regions in adolescents, in the context of decision-making.

These findings are NOT necessarily damning for marijuana enthusiasts. This study points to a relationship between facial emotion recognition and cannabis consumption, but it does not and cannot (with the present statistical parameters) speak to causality or trajectory of function following marijuana use. For a summary on what we know about the functional, metabolic, and neuropathological consequences of marijuana, see Volkow et al. (2016).

Facial emotion processing is a complex process that reflects just one aspect of social cognition and affective awareness. These findings are not expansive or far reaching. Rather, they speak to the possibility that early marijuana consumption may impact, perturb, or otherwise transiently disturb the neurological underpinnings of facial affect reception, appreciation, and interpretation. This is an interesting study and should not be discounted for (a) small sample size (most neuroimaging studies are not feasible for massive N, effect size is most important) or (b) focus on cannabis alone.