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Early adolescent cannabis exposure and positive and negative dimensions of psychosis.

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TLDR
Exposure early in adolescence may increase the risk for the subclinical positive and negative dimensions of psychosis, but not for depression, adding credence to the hypothesis that cannabis contributes to the population level of expression of psychosis.
Abstract
Aims To investigate the effect of exposure to cannabis early in adolescence on subclinical positive and negative symptoms of psychosis. Design Cross-sectional survey in the context of an ongoing cohort study. Setting Government-supported general population cohort study. Participants A total of 3500 representative 19-year olds in Greece. Measurements Subjects filled in the 40-item Community Assessment of Psychic Experiences, measuring subclinical positive (paranoia, hallucinations, grandiosity, first-rank symptoms) and negative psychosis dimensions and depression. Drug use was also reported on. Findings Use of cannabis was associated positively with both positive and negative dimensions of psychosis, independent of each other, and of depression. An association between cannabis and depression disappeared after adjustment for the negative psychosis dimensions. First use of cannabis below age 16 years was associated with a much stronger effect than first use after age 15 years, independent of life-time frequency of use. The association between cannabis and psychosis was not influenced by the distress associated with the experiences, indicating that self-medication may be an unlikely explanation for the entire association between cannabis and psychosis. Conclusions These results add credence to the hypothesis that cannabis contributes to the population level of expression of psychosis. In particular, exposure early in adolescence may increase the risk for the subclinical positive and negative dimensions of psychosis, but not for depression.

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The Environment and Schizophrenia: The Role of Cannabis Use

TL;DR: Evidence suggests that cannabis is a component cause in the development and prognosis of psychosis, in which mechanisms of gene-environment interaction are most likely to explain this association.
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The Chronic Effects of Cannabis on Memory in Humans: A Review

TL;DR: The impact of not only specific parameters of cannabis use in the manifestation of memory dysfunction, but also such factors as age, neurodevelopmental stage, IQ, gender, various vulnerabilities and other substance-use interactions are considered, in the context of neural efficiency and compensatory mechanisms.
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Rate of Cannabis Use Disorders in Clinical Samples of Patients With Schizophrenia: A Meta-analysis

TL;DR: CUDs were especially common in younger and first-episode patient samples as well as in samples with a high proportion of males, and almost every fourth schizophrenia patient in the authors' sample of studies had a diagnosis of CUDs.
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Gone to Pot - A Review of the Association between Cannabis and Psychosis.

TL;DR: The evidence indicates that cannabis may be a component cause in the emergence of psychosis, and this warrants serious consideration from the point of view of public health policy.
References
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Measurement and Classification of Psychiatric Symptoms

TL;DR: This measurement and classification of psychiatric symptoms, it will really give you the good idea to be successful.
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Psychosis as a state of aberrant salience: A framework linking biology, phenomenology, and pharmacology in schizophrenia.

TL;DR: A heuristic framework for linking the psychological and biological in psychosis is provided and it is proposed that a dysregulated, hyperdopaminergic state, at a "brain" level of description and analysis, leads to an aberrant assignment of salience to the elements of one's experience, at an "mind" level.
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The Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms (SANS): conceptual and theoretical foundations.

TL;DR: The SANS is complemented by a Scale for the Assessment of Positive Symptoms (SAPS), which permits detailed evaluation and global ratings of hallucinations, delusions, positive formal thought disorder and bizarre behaviour and taken together, the two scales provide a comprehensive set of rating scales.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cannabis use in adolescence and risk for adult psychosis: longitudinal prospective study

TL;DR: This is the first prospective longitudinal study of adolescent cannabis use as a risk factor for adult schizophreniform disorder, taking into account childhood psychotic symptoms, and the Dunedin multidisciplinary health and development study has a 96% follow up rate at age 26.
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The continuity of psychotic experiences in the general population

TL;DR: Evidence for the continuity of psychotic symptoms with normal experiences is reviewed, focusing on the symptoms of hallucinations and delusions, and the theoretical and treatment implications of such a continuum are discussed.
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