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Eye movements in patients in early psychosis with and without a history of cannabis use

Authors :
Aisling O'Neill
Tracy Collier
Steve C.R. Williams
Anas Rana
Savitha Eranti
Sagnik Bhattacharyya
Debasis Das
Luciano Annibale
Chidimma Onyejiaka
Ulrich Ettinger
Marlene Kelbrick
Musa Sami
Philip McGuire
Source :
NPJ Schizophrenia, npj Schizophrenia, Vol 7, Iss 1, Pp 1-7 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group UK, 2021.

Abstract

It is unclear whether early psychosis in the context of cannabis use is different from psychosis without cannabis. We investigated this issue by examining whether abnormalities in oculomotor control differ between patients with psychosis with and without a history of cannabis use. We studied four groups: patients in the early phase of psychosis with a history of cannabis use (EPC; n = 28); patients in the early phase of psychosis without (EPNC; n = 25); controls with a history of cannabis use (HCC; n = 16); and controls without (HCNC; n = 22). We studied smooth pursuit eye movements using a stimulus with sinusoidal waveform at three target frequencies (0.2, 0.4 and 0.6 Hz). Participants also performed 40 antisaccade trials. There were no differences between the EPC and EPNC groups in diagnosis, symptom severity or level of functioning. We found evidence for a cannabis effect (χ2 = 23.14, p χ2 = 4.84, p = 0.028) and patient × cannabis effect (χ2 = 4.20, p = 0.04) for smooth pursuit velocity gain. There was a large difference between EPC and EPNC (g = 0.76–0.86) with impairment in the non cannabis using group. We found no significant effect for antisaccade error whereas patients had fewer valid trials compared to controls. These data indicate that impairment of smooth pursuit in psychosis is more severe in patients without a history of cannabis use. This is consistent with the notion that the severity of neurobiological alterations in psychosis is lower in patients whose illness developed in the context of cannabis use.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2334265X
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
NPJ Schizophrenia
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cd4ab15ede24935708c1977bce819c16