jwh-018 and Cognitive-Dysfunction

jwh-018 has been researched along with Cognitive-Dysfunction* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for jwh-018 and Cognitive-Dysfunction

ArticleYear
Intoxication by a synthetic cannabinoid (JWH-018) causes cognitive and psychomotor impairment in recreational cannabis users.
    Pharmacology, biochemistry, and behavior, 2021, Volume: 202

    Smoking mixtures containing synthetic cannabinoids (SCs) have become very popular over the last years but pose a serious risk for public health. Limited knowledge is, however, available regarding the acute effects of SCs on cognition and psychomotor performance. Earlier we demonstrated signs of impairment in healthy volunteers after administering one of the first SCs, JWH-018, even though subjective intoxication was low. In the current study, we aimed to investigate the acute effects of JWH-018 on several cognitive and psychomotor tasks in participants who are demonstrating representative levels of acute intoxication.. 24 healthy cannabis-experienced participants took part in this placebo-controlled, cross-over study. Participants inhaled the vapor of 75 μg JWH-018/kg body weight and were given a booster dose if needed to induce a minimum level of subjective high. They were subsequently monitored for 4 h, during which psychomotor and cognitive performance, vital signs, and subjective experience were measured, and serum concentrations were determined.. Maximum subjective high (average 64%) was reached 30 min after administration of JWH-018, while the maximum blood concentration was shown after 5 min (8 ng/mL). JWH-018 impaired motor coordination (CTT), attention (DAT and SST), memory (SMT), it lowered speed-accuracy efficiency (MFFT) and slowed down response speed (DAT).. In accordance with our previous studies, we demonstrated acute psychomotor and cognitive effects of a relatively low dose of JWH-018.

    Topics: Administration, Inhalation; Adult; Attention; Cannabinoids; Cannabis; Cognition; Cognitive Dysfunction; Cross-Over Studies; Double-Blind Method; Female; Healthy Volunteers; Humans; Illicit Drugs; Indoles; Male; Naphthalenes; Plant Extracts; Psychomotor Disorders; Psychomotor Performance; Reaction Time; Recreational Drug Use; Spatial Memory; Synthetic Drugs; Young Adult

2021