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Effects of cannabis on visual function and self-perceived visual quality

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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10481/65901
DOI: doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-81070-5
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Author
Ortiz Peregrina, Sonia; Ortiz Herrera, Carolina; Casares López, Miriam; Jiménez, José R.; González Anera, María Del Rosario
Editorial
Springer Nature
Date
2021-01-18
Referencia bibliográfica
Scientific Reports (2021) 11:1655
Abstract
Cannabis is one of the most used drugs of abuse in the world. The objective of this study was to analyze the effects of smoking cannabis on vision and to relate these to those perceived by the user. Thirty-one cannabis users participated in this study. Visual function assessment was carried out in a baseline session as well as after smoking cannabis. We evaluated static visual acuity, contrast sensitivity, stereoacuity, accommodative response, straylight, night-vision disturbances (halos) and pupil size. The participants were also divided into two groups depending on whether they perceived their vision to have worsened after smoking cannabis. A logistic regression analysis was employed to identify which visual test could best predict self-perceived visual effects. The study found that smoking cannabis has significant adverse effects on all the visual parameters analyzed (p < 0.05). Self-perceived visual quality results revealed that about two thirds of the sample think that smoking cannabis impairs their vision. Contrast sensitivity, specifically for the spatial frequency 18 cpd, was identified as the only visual parameter significantly associated with self-perceived visual quality (Odds Ratio: 1.135; p = 0.040). Smoking cannabis is associated with negative effects on visual function. Self-perceived visual quality after smoking cannabis could be related to impaired contrast sensitivity.
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