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White matter alterations associated with chronic cannabis use disorder: a structural network and fixel-based analysis

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posted on 2024-10-25, 05:09 authored by S Maleki, J Hendrikse, K Richardson, RA Segrave, S Hughes, E Kayayan, S Oldham, W Syeda, JP Coxon, Karen CaeyenberghsKaren Caeyenberghs, JF Domínguez D, N Solowij, DI Lubman, C Suo, M Yücel
AbstractCannabis use disorder (CUD) is associated with adverse mental health effects, as well as social and cognitive impairment. Given prevalence rates of CUD are increasing, there is considerable efforts, and need, to identify prognostic markers which may aid in minimising any harm associated with this condition. Previous neuroimaging studies have revealed changes in white matter (WM) organization in people with CUD, though, the findings are mixed. In this study, we applied MRI-based analysis techniques that offer complimentary mechanistic insights, i.e., a connectome approach and fixel-based analysis (FBA) to investigate properties of individual WM fibre populations and their microstructure across the entire brain, providing a highly sensitive approach to detect subtle changes and overcome limitations of previous diffusion models. We compared 56 individuals with CUD (median age 25 years) to a sample of 38 healthy individuals (median age 31.5 years). Compared to controls, those with CUD had significantly increased structural connectivity strength (FDR corrected) across 9 edges between the right parietal cortex and several cortical and subcortical regions, including left orbitofrontal, left temporal pole, and left hippocampus and putamen. Utilizing FBA, WM density was significantly higher in those with CUD (FWE-corrected) across the splenium of the corpus callosum, and lower in the bilateral cingulum and right cerebellum. We observed significant correlation between cannabis use over the past month and connectivity strength of the frontoparietal edge, and between age of regular use and WM density of the bilateral cingulum and right cerebellum. Our findings enhance the understanding of WM architecture alterations associated with CUD.

History

Journal

Translational Psychiatry

Volume

14

Article number

429

Pagination

1-9

Location

Berlin, Germany

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

2158-3188

eISSN

2158-3188

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

Springer