Source:bmc.org
Marijuana use is associated with cognitive dysfunction in people with
HIV infection who have an alcohol or other drug use disorder, according
to a new study from researchers at Boston University School of Public
Health (BUSPH), Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM), and Boston
Medical Center (BMC).
While researchers did not detect effects of lifetime cumulative exposure, the study, published in Substance Abuse,
showed that more frequent current marijuana use was associated with a
measure of cognitive dysfunction on the Medical Outcomes Study HIV
Health Survey cognitive function scale.
"People with HIV infection have many reasons to have cognitive
dysfunction, from the virus itself to medications for HIV infection and
related conditions, particularly as they age," said co-author Richard
Saitz, professor and chair of community health sciences at BUSPH, who
served as principal investigator on the study. "They also have symptoms
like chronic pain and mental health symptoms, and use of marijuana,
medically or recreationally, may seem like an option to consider. But at
least among people with substance use disorders, it appears to have
detrimental effects on cognitive function."
Substance use and substance use disorder are disproportionally common
among people living with HIV (PLWH)--estimated at 40 percent to 74
percent. As PLWH are successfully treated for their infections and are
now getting older, information about how alcohol and marijuana might
affect their symptoms and physical function is critical to their
continued health. Aging with HIV infection is associated with many of
the same comorbid health conditions that occur in people without HIV
infection. These include cardiovascular diseases and dementia, both of
which can be affected by substance use.
"Few,
if any, studies have examined the combined effects that alcohol use and
marijuana use may have on cognition in PLWH," the authors wrote. "Such
an understanding could contribute to efforts to reduce harmful substance
use and prevent clinical consequences, particularly in an era in which
'moderate' drinking is at times discussed in terms of possible
beneficial effects, and in which marijuana is discussed as a relatively
safe and even therapeutic substance."
The researchers conducted cross-sectional regression analyses on 215
HIV-infected adults diagnosed with substance disorder, based on the
current Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (fourth
edition). Participants were part of the Boston Alcohol Research
Collaboration on HIV/AIDS cohort, 18 years or older, and had current
alcohol or other drug dependence. The study included measures of both
current and lifetime alcohol and marijuana use.
There were no effects detected of alcohol or past marijuana exposure
on cognitive function, nor did there appear to be any evidence for
synergistic effects on cognition. Furthermore, neither alcohol nor
marijuana appeared to affect simple tests of memory or attention. The
authors postulated that such effects were not detected, even though they
are expected at the least with heavy alcohol use, because of multiple
other exposures and comorbid health conditions that participants had.
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