Neuropsychiatric consequences of cannabis use during adolescence

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Vitória Xavier Barbieri
Lara Sampaio Zaquine Coelho
Hélcio Serpa de Figueiredo Júnior

Resumen

Objetivo: Analizar los posibles factores de riesgo, motivos, influencia y consecuencias en el desarrollo neuropsiquiátrico del consumo comórbido de cannabis entre los jóvenes de hoy. Métodos: National Library of Medicine (PubMed), Virtual Health Library (BVS) y Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) fueron las bases de datos utilizadas para el abordaje metodológico de este estudio. El abordaje metodológico a través de un enfoque cualitativo y con carácter de revisión bibliográfica. Los descriptores utilizados fueron “esquizofrenia”, “cannabis” y “desarrollo” utilizando el operador booleano “y”. Los criterios de inclusión fueron todos los artículos originales, publicados en inglés, portugués y español. Resultados: De los casos de suicidio en la adolescencia se seleccionan los intentos de suicidio como combinaciones de posibles consecuencias del cannabis en la adolescencia, teniendo como hallazgos: trastorno, depresión y ansiedad. La esquizofrenia es la comorbilidad más prevalente entre las posibles influencias neuropsicológicas del cannabidiol. Consideraciones finales: Así, se concluye que el uso de la adolescencia actualmente tiene riesgos y está relacionado con la influencia del tetrahidrocannabinol (THC) en el sistema endobinoide.

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Cómo citar
BarbieriV. X., CoelhoL. S. Z., & Figueiredo JúniorH. S. de. (2023). Neuropsychiatric consequences of cannabis use during adolescence. Revista Eletrônica Acervo Médico, 23(8), e13586. https://doi.org/10.25248/reamed.e13586.2023
Sección
Revisão Bibliográfica

Citas

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