View clinical trials related to Marijuana Abuse.
Filter by:The randomised controlled study on regulated cannabis access in pharmacies in Basel aims to investigate the effects of regulated cannabis access on consumption behaviour and mental and physical health in comparison to the illegal market.
The Stanford Tobacco Prevention Toolkit is a free, online Toolkit that consists of a curriculum, educational resources, and a resource directory to be used by educators, parents, juvenile justice workers, and healthcare providers to increase knowledge and awareness of cannabis and reduce use among youth. The aim of this study is to investigate the extent to which the curriculum changes students' intentions to use and actual use of cannabis.
Aims: To characterize the pattern of cannabis and tobacco use and withdrawal symptoms in people who start treatment for cannabis use disorders (exclusive cannabis, concurrent and/or simultaneous with various tobacco products) through an aplication game and considering the type of users. Methodology: Mixed-methods research composed of three studies. Study I: qualitative participatory action study aimed at exploring the experiences and preferences of the cannabis users on the use of apps. This information will be instrumental in the co-design of the app. Study II: prospective longitudinal study aimed to establish consumption patterns and transitions between substances and to validate the scale of cannabis withdrawal symptoms in the Spanish population. Sample size: expected RR=1.20, α =0.05, β= 0.20, losses= 20% (n=282). Study III: qualitative study to explore participants' experiences during the process of quitting cannabis and / or tobacco. Expected results: Characterization and prediction of variables that influence cannabis and tobacco cessation/ reduction and describe withdrawal symptoms according to consumption patterns with aim of improving the design of future interventions.
This study will be a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter trial conducted to evaluate whether PP-01 mitigates the withdrawal symptoms associated with discontinuing cannabis in participants with moderate to severe Cannabis Use Disorder (CUD). The study will enroll approximately 225 participants with moderate to severe CUD and will include 5 arms, including a placebo arm, to help assess the incidence and severity of withdrawal symptoms in heavy long-term users of cannabis. Participants receive study medication for 34 days and participate in 11 visits (7 at a clinic and 4 telemedicine).
This study will examine the acute effects of cannabis on various aspects of memory. Eligible participants will complete a drug screen. Participants who pass the drug screen will be asked to wear an Empatica E4 wristband for the duration of the study. Participants will provide a saliva sample from which cortisol will be extracted. They will then complete baseline measures of cannabis consumption patterns, level of intoxication, mood, anxiety, stress, and verbal intelligence. Next, participants will be randomly assigned to inhale vapor from cannabis containing 20mg THC, 40mg THC, or placebo; both cannabis and placebo will be obtained from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA). Participants will then will complete a battery of memory tests including tests of prospective, verbal, visuospatial, source, verbal working, visuospatial working, false, and temporal order memory. Memory tests will be completed across two blocks in a counterbalanced order. Saliva samples will be obtained two additional times after drug/placebo administration. Ratings of intoxication, mood, anxiety, and stress will be obtained three additional times after drug/placebo administration. The investigators hypothesize that participants who are randomly assigned to inhale cannabis vapor will perform worse on all memory tests than participants who inhale the placebo.
The study will test a computerized treatment with subjects ages 13-17 years who are seeking treatment for alcohol and/or cannabis use. Follow-up assessments will be conducted at one- and three-months following treatment.
The primary goals of this study are to examine 1) marijuana modulation of oxycodone self-administration and 2) oxycodone modulation of marijuana self-administration, under controlled conditions and across a range of doses for each drug.
The main purpose of this study is to determine whether hippocampal synaptic vesicle density estimated by hippocampal [11C]APP-311/[11C]UCB-J binding in individuals diagnosed with cannabis use disorder (CUDs) improves with at least 4 weeks of confirmed abstinence from cannabis, in comparison to healthy controls (HCs). Furthermore, any change in synaptic vesicle density will be placed in functional context by measuring verbal memory, which is sensitive to hippocampal function, before and after at least 4 weeks of confirmed abstinence. Finally, the relationship between hippocampal [11C]UCB-J binding in CUDs with measures of cannabis exposure (e.g., age of initiation, cumulative lifetime dose) will be explored.
The aim of the study is to examine the effect of cannabis use on brain synaptic density among older adults using [11C]UCB-J PET imaging.
To elucidate mechanisms of substance use disorders (SUD) and comorbid mental illnesses in people living with HIV (PLWH), the study team seeks to investigate reward and pain circuitry in cannabis use and depression comorbidity, two highly prevalent conditions in PLWH. The study team proposes a tightly integrative study to test the overall hypothesis that cannabis use and depression in young PLWH have an additive effect, inducing both reward deficits and pain hypersensitivity, and that this pattern will predict worse outcomes at 1 year follow-up.