A large study from the University of Colorado found heavy cannabis use is linked to reduced brain activity. Lead researcher Joshua Gowin and neurosurgeon Paul Saphier discuss the impact on health.
Avoiding cannabis use before certain cognitive tasks could improve performance Heavy cannabis use may negatively impact one's working memory, according to a new study from researchers in Colorado. The ...
The study, conducted in Ontario, Canada, found that people treated for CUD in hospitals or emergency rooms were 10 times more ...
“Heavy use of cannabis over one’s lifetime may ultimately lead to decreased cognitive/memory tasks,” he said. “This also supports a relatively common and well-articulated lifestyle mantra ...
A new study analyzes the disease burden and the risk factors for severity among people who suffer from a condition called ...
A large new study has found that heavy cannabis use is linked to lower brain activity during tasks that involve working ...
A new study suggests that people who visit the emergency department (ED) due to cannabis use may have a much higher risk of ...
Heavy use of cannabis recently or at any point in a person’s lifetime was tied to decreases in brain function during a working memory task, a new cross-sectional analysis showed.The data indicate ...
A new study shows risks for premature death associated with CUD. Others show increased memory problems, CUD, depression, ...
Dampening the activity of the affected brain areas is like turning down the volume on your cognitive DJ right when the ...
Heavy weed use may be far more dangerous than people realize, according to a pair of studies published in JAMA Network Open. People diagnosed with cannabis use disorder (CUD) may face nearly ...