BACKGROUND: Recent evidence documents that cannabis use by young people is a modest statistical risk factor for psychotic symptoms in adulthood, such as hallucinations and delusions, as well as clinically significant schizophrenia. The vast majority of cannabis users do not develop psychosis, however, prompting us to hypothesize that some people are genetically vulnerable to the deleterious effects of cannabis. METHODS: In a longitudinal study of a representative birth cohort followed to adulthood, we tested why cannabis use is associated with the emergence of psychosis in a minority of users, but not in others. RESULTS: A functional polymorphism in the catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) gene moderated the influence of adolescent cannabis ...
Evidence suggests that childhood trauma and cannabis use sinergistically impact on psychosis risk, a...
Neither environmental nor genetic factors are sufficient to predict the transdiagnostic expression o...
Cannabis use is considered a contributory cause of schizo-phrenia and psychotic illness. However, on...
AbstractBackgroundCannabis use and childhood maltreatment are independent risk factors for the devel...
Background: Cannabis use and childhood maltreatment are independent risk factors for the development...
Background: Epidemiological and retrospective studies suggest a cannabis x catechol-O-methyltransfer...
Cannabis use is likely to increase the risk for schizophrenia, but it is neither a necessary nor a s...
Cannabis use and childhood maltreatment are independent risk factors for the development of psychoti...
Observational studies have suggested that psychometric psychosis liability and a functional polymorp...
Background A putative interaction between cannabis and variation at rs4680 within the catechol-meth...
OBJECTIVE: To test whether the association between childhood abuse, cannabis use and psychotic ex...
Evidence suggests that childhood trauma and cannabis use sinergistically impact on psychosis risk, a...
Neither environmental nor genetic factors are sufficient to predict the transdiagnostic expression o...
Cannabis use is considered a contributory cause of schizo-phrenia and psychotic illness. However, on...
AbstractBackgroundCannabis use and childhood maltreatment are independent risk factors for the devel...
Background: Cannabis use and childhood maltreatment are independent risk factors for the development...
Background: Epidemiological and retrospective studies suggest a cannabis x catechol-O-methyltransfer...
Cannabis use is likely to increase the risk for schizophrenia, but it is neither a necessary nor a s...
Cannabis use and childhood maltreatment are independent risk factors for the development of psychoti...
Observational studies have suggested that psychometric psychosis liability and a functional polymorp...
Background A putative interaction between cannabis and variation at rs4680 within the catechol-meth...
OBJECTIVE: To test whether the association between childhood abuse, cannabis use and psychotic ex...
Evidence suggests that childhood trauma and cannabis use sinergistically impact on psychosis risk, a...
Neither environmental nor genetic factors are sufficient to predict the transdiagnostic expression o...
Cannabis use is considered a contributory cause of schizo-phrenia and psychotic illness. However, on...