Divergent effects of oral cannabis oil extracts marketed as C. indica or C. sativa on exertion of cognitive effort in rats.

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q3 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Hannah G Brodie, Brett A Hathaway, Andrew Li, Samantha L Baglot, Sukhbir Kaur, Matthew N Hill, Catharine A Winstanley
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Abstract

The main psychoactive compound within the cannabis plant, Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), is thought to drive both the sensation of "high" and the cognitive impairments associated with cannabis consumption. Researchers keen to understand how cannabis impairs cognition have, therefore, studied the behavioral effects of systemic injections of THC in animal models. However, cannabis contains multiple other cannabinoids which may critically modulate the resulting cognitive effects. Users also typically eat or smoke cannabis, leading to concern over the translational validity of pure THC injections. We, therefore, tested whether acute oral administration of two different commercially available cannabis extracts, marketed as C. indica or C. sativa, decreased male Long-Evans rats' willingness to exert greater cognitive effort in order to maximize reward earned, as expected from previous experiments using injected THC. Both oils were matched for THC and cannabidiol content. While both cannabis products slowed response times at higher doses, only C. indica oil at the highest dose administered (10 mg/kg THC) decreased the number of trials on which rats chose to complete high-effort/high-reward trials. Repeated dosing with a medium dose of either cannabinoid product (3 mg/kg THC) did not influence choice. Ex vivo analyses confirmed comparable levels of brain THC after C. indica or C. sativa administration. Although controversial in the field, these results support the suggestion that products marketed as different cannabis cultivars have dissociable cognitive effects that may not resemble pure THC and emphasize the importance of the route of administration in experimental design. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

口服大麻油提取物对大鼠认知能力的不同影响。
大麻植物中主要的精神活性化合物Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol(四氢大麻酚)被认为既会导致“兴奋”的感觉,也会导致与大麻消费相关的认知障碍。因此,渴望了解大麻如何损害认知的研究人员在动物模型中研究了全身注射四氢大麻酚的行为影响。然而,大麻含有多种其他大麻素,可能会严重调节由此产生的认知效果。使用者通常还会食用或吸食大麻,这引发了对纯四氢大麻酚注射转化有效性的担忧。因此,我们测试了急性口服两种不同的市售大麻提取物(以C. indica或C. sativa销售)是否会降低雄性Long-Evans大鼠为获得最大奖励而付出更大认知努力的意愿,正如之前使用注射四氢大麻酚的实验所预期的那样。两种油的四氢大麻酚和大麻二酚含量相匹配。虽然两种大麻产品在高剂量下都减慢了反应时间,但只有最高剂量(10毫克/公斤四氢大麻酚)的印度大麻油减少了大鼠选择完成高努力/高回报试验的次数。重复使用中剂量的大麻素产品(3mg /kg THC)不影响选择。离体分析证实了给药后脑内四氢大麻酚水平相当。尽管在该领域存在争议,但这些结果支持了以下建议:作为不同大麻品种销售的产品具有可分离的认知效应,可能与纯四氢大麻酚不同,并强调了实验设计中给药途径的重要性。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c) 2023 APA,版权所有)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Behavioral neuroscience
Behavioral neuroscience 医学-行为科学
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
51
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Behavioral Neuroscience publishes original research articles as well as reviews in the broad field of the neural bases of behavior.
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