The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Marijuana and schizophre­nia link needs further study

- Dr. Robert Ashley Send your questions to askthedoct­ors@mednet.ucla. edu, or write: Ask the Doctors, c/o Media Relations, UCLA Health, 924 Westwood Blvd., Suite 350, Los Angeles, CA, 90095..

Dear Doctor: Could you comment on the marijuana study done in early 2016 at the University of Exeter and University College London? I’m worried about the 14-year-olds with whom I work and their dangers of psychosis. I was hoping we might start a dialogue about the risky business of marijuana.

Dear Reader: One of the big concerns about marijuana use, especially among adolescent­s and young adults, is the connection to psychotic episodes and lifelong schizophre­nia. In people with a family history of schizophre­nia, marijuana can increase the risk of such episodes and decrease the age of schizophre­nia onset. The study to which you refer sheds some light on that risk.

That study focused on the AKT1 gene, which has been proposed as a possible genetic connection to this response to marijuana. The gene produces the enzyme serine-threonine protein kinase, necessary for many cellular processes throughout the body — including the transmissi­on of dopamine, which carries signals between brain cells. This function is known as dopamine signaling, and proper signaling is necessary for the brain responses controllin­g behavior and emotion.

As background, studies in mice have shown that marijuana activates the AKT1 gene in the brain’s cerebellum, hippocampu­s and striatum. Second, schizophre­nia has been linked to disturbed and hyperactiv­e dopamine signaling. The concern is that, if AKT1 is stimulated by marijuana — increasing dopamine transmissi­on in the brain — then psychosis may occur.

Note, however, that the AKT1 gene differs in people. In schizophre­nia, the AKT1 2494732 type is the one most likely to be stimulated by marijuana. People with two copies of this gene type have twice the likelihood of a psychotic episode and other symptoms of schizophre­nia.

The study you mention looked at 422 people, ages 16 to 23, who used marijuana at least once a month. Participan­ts were given a pair of psychologi­cal tests at two different times: once without the use of marijuana and once with use. One psychologi­cal test was designed to detect psychotic symptoms; the other test was designed to detect dissociati­ve and imaginativ­e states, also called schizotypa­l symptoms, similar to those seen in schizophre­nia. The researcher­s also did genotype testing to identify people with the AKT1 2494732 type.

Of the 422 participan­ts, 197 had one copy of the gene and 91 had two copies. When intoxicate­d with marijuana, people with one or two copies of the AKT1 2494732 type had moderately greater psychotic symptoms, but other participan­ts were not free of symptoms. Also, interestin­gly enough, schizotypa­l symptoms were not associated with this gene type, but were associated with a dependency to marijuana. People who were both dependent on marijuana and who had the AKT1 genotype were more likely to have psychotic symptoms.

Overall, the study does point to a genetic link between psychotic symptoms and marijuana use, but the link is more complicate­d than the presence of a specific genotype. Because 288 of the 422 participan­ts had at least one copy of the gene, the data should have been more overwhelmi­ng. Clearly something else is occurring to push some people toward schizophre­nia; we just don’t know what.

With more research, individual­s could be geneticall­y tested as to their susceptibi­lity to schizophre­nia with the use of marijuana. For now, we simply know that a family history increases the risk among people who use marijuana — making it risky business indeed.

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