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Journal Article

Citation

Núñez LA, Gurpegui M. Acta Psychiatr. Scand. 2002; 105(3): 173-178.

Affiliation

Psychiatry Service, Hospital de Navarra, Pamplona, Spain. land@abc.ibernet.com

Copyright

(Copyright © 2002, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

11939970

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The existence of cannabis-induced psychosis (CP) remains controversial, partly because of methodological problems. We hypothesize that acute schizophrenia (AS) and CP can have distinct demographic, premorbid and clinical features. METHOD: We compared 26 patients with CP to 35 with AS, after their cannabis-consumption status was confirmed by repeated urine screens. Patients with CP were assessed after at least 1 week but not more than 1 month of abstinence. Symptoms were evaluated with the Present State Examination (PSE). RESULTS: In group CP, male gender, expansive mood and ideation, derealization/depersonalization, visual hallucinations, and disturbances of sensorium were more frequent than in group AS. Premorbid schizoid personality traits were more frequently associated to AS and antisocial personality traits to CP. CONCLUSION: The continuous heavy use of cannabis can induce a psychotic disorder distinct from AS. These two clinical entities share some features but they differ in others.


Language: en

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