Separate and combined effects of alcohol and cannabis on mood, subjective experience, cognition and psychomotor performance: A randomized trial

Co-use of alcohol and cannabis is associated with increased frequency and intensity of use and related problems. This study examined acute effects of alcohol and cannabis on mood, subjective experience, cognition, and psychomotor performance. Twenty-eight healthy cannabis users aged 19–29 years with...

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Published inProgress in neuro-psychopharmacology & biological psychiatry Vol. 118; p. 110570
Main Authors Wickens, Christine M., Wright, Madison, Mann, Robert E., Brands, Bruna, Di Ciano, Patricia, Stoduto, Gina, Fares, Andrew, Matheson, Justin, George, Tony P., Rehm, Jürgen, Shuper, Paul A., Sproule, Beth, Samohkvalov, Andriy, Huestis, Marilyn A., Le Foll, Bernard
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Elsevier Inc 30.08.2022
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Summary:Co-use of alcohol and cannabis is associated with increased frequency and intensity of use and related problems. This study examined acute effects of alcohol and cannabis on mood, subjective experience, cognition, and psychomotor performance. Twenty-eight healthy cannabis users aged 19–29 years with recent history of binge drinking completed this within-subjects, double-blind, double-dummy, placebo-controlled, randomized clinical trial. Participants received: placebo alcohol and placebo cannabis (<0.1% THC); alcohol (target breath alcohol content [BrAC] 80 mg/dL) and placebo cannabis; placebo alcohol and active cannabis (12.5% THC); and active alcohol and cannabis over four sessions. Profile of Mood States (POMS), Addiction Research Centre Inventory (ARCI), verbal free recall (VFR), Digit Symbol Substitution Test (DSST), Continuous Performance Test (CPT), and grooved pegboard (GPB) task were administered before and approximately 75 min after drinking alcohol (1 h after smoking cannabis ad libitum). Significant effects of condition were found for the POMS (Tension-Anxiety, Confusion) and ARCI (MBG, LSD, PCAG, Euphoria, Sedation), predominantly with greater increases emerging after cannabis or alcohol-cannabis combined relative to placebo. Significant effects were found for VFR (immediate total and delayed recall, percent retained), DSST (trials attempted, trials correct, reaction time), and GPB (non-dominant hand) predominantly with greater declines in performance after alcohol and alcohol-cannabis combined relative to placebo and/or cannabis. Cannabis appeared to affect mood and subjective experience, with minimal impact on cognitive performance. Alcohol appeared to impair cognitive and psychomotor performance, with minimal impact on mood and subjective experience. Acute effects of alcohol and cannabis combined were additive at most. •Examined acute effects of alcohol (target BrAC 80 mg/dL) and cannabis (12.5% THC) separate and combined.•Within-subjects randomized clinical trial of 28 healthy cannabis users aged 19–29 years.•Cannabis affected mood and subjective experience, with minimal impact on cognitive performance.•Alcohol impaired cognitive and psychomotor performance, with minimal impact on mood and subjective experience.•Acute effects of alcohol and cannabis combined were additive at most.
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ISSN:0278-5846
1878-4216
1878-4216
DOI:10.1016/j.pnpbp.2022.110570