All Relations between ci and cannabis

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Carmen Cecilia Caballero-Dominguez, Adalberto Campo-Arias, María Paola Jiménez-Villamiza. Relationship Between Sexual Abuse and Substance Use Among Students from Caribbean Colombian. Journal of child sexual abuse. 2024-02-14. PMID:38351595. history of sexual abuse was associated with alcohol use (or = 1.59, 95% ci 1.10-2.30), cigarette (or = 2.08, 95% ci 1.51-2.85), cannabis (or = 2.43, 95% ci 1.66-3.56), cocaine (or = 2.51, 95% ci 1.25-5.04) and use of other substances (or = 2.33, 95% ci 1.31-4.13). 2024-02-14 2024-02-16 Not clear
Cerina Dubois, Carlotta Lunghi, Dean T Eurich, Jason R B Dyck, Elaine Hyshka, John G Hanlon, Arsene Zong. Medical cannabis authorization and risk of emergency department visits and hospitalization due to psychotic disorders: A propensity score-matched cohort study. Schizophrenia research. vol 264. 2024-02-08. PMID:38330686. incidence rates for psychotic disorders were 3.00/1000 person-years (95%ci: 2.72-3.32) in the cannabis group and 1.88/1000 person-years (1.75-2.03) in the control group. 2024-02-08 2024-02-11 Not clear
André J McDonald, Paul Kurdyak, Jürgen Rehm, Michael Roerecke, Susan J Bond. Youth cannabis use and subsequent health service use for mood and anxiety disorders: A population-based cohort study. Psychiatry research. vol 332. 2024-01-04. PMID:38176165. compared to no cannabis use, ciated with subsequent mad health service use (ahr=1.48; 95 % ci: 1.10-1.99) while weekly+ use was not (ahr=0.92; 95 % ci: 0.63-1.34). 2024-01-04 2024-01-07 Not clear
Gaurav Maggu, Swati Choudhary, Rajon Jaishy, Suprakash Chaudhury, Daniel Saldanha, Manish Boras. Cannabis use and its relationship with bipolar disorder: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Industrial psychiatry journal. vol 32. issue 2. 2024-01-01. PMID:38161465. a fixed effect model was used in the meta-analysis of these five studies and it revealed an association between cannabis and bipolar disorder with an effect size of 2.63 (95% ci: 1.95-3.53) (heterogeneity: chi² = 3.01, df = 3 ( 2024-01-01 2024-01-05 Not clear
Ikponmwosa Osaghae, Onyema Greg Chido-Amajuoyi, Banda A A Khalifa, Rajesh Talluri, Sanjay Shet. Cannabis Use among Cancer Survivors: Use Pattern, Product Type, and Timing of Use. Cancers. vol 15. issue 24. 2023-12-23. PMID:38136367. a total of 1886 cancer survivors were included in the study, with 915 (48% [95% ci: 45-51]) reporting ever using cannabis. 2023-12-23 2023-12-25 Not clear
Ikponmwosa Osaghae, Onyema Greg Chido-Amajuoyi, Banda A A Khalifa, Rajesh Talluri, Sanjay Shet. Cannabis Use among Cancer Survivors: Use Pattern, Product Type, and Timing of Use. Cancers. vol 15. issue 24. 2023-12-23. PMID:38136367. of survivors who had ever used cannabis, 36% (95% ci: 33-40) were current users. 2023-12-23 2023-12-25 Not clear
Ellen T Kurtzman, Burt S Barno. The impact of recreational cannabis laws on cannabis use disorder during "treat and release" visits to hospital emergency departments in four U.S. states, 2017-2020. Preventive medicine reports. vol 36. 2023-12-01. PMID:38021411. compared to states where recreational cannabis was illegal, legalizing cannabis for recreational use was associated with nearly a 50 % decrease in the adjusted odds of cud (aor = 0.49, 95 % ci 0.47, 0.52). 2023-12-01 2023-12-07 Not clear
Ellen T Kurtzman, Burt S Barno. The impact of recreational cannabis laws on cannabis use disorder during "treat and release" visits to hospital emergency departments in four U.S. states, 2017-2020. Preventive medicine reports. vol 36. 2023-12-01. PMID:38021411. compared to states where recreational cannabis was illegal, legalizing cannabis for recreational use was associated with nearly a 50 % decrease in the adjusted odds of cud (aor = 0.49, 95 % ci 0.47, 0.52). 2023-11-29 2023-12-07 Not clear
Anastasia Lendel, Ria Richards, Jason Benedict, Courtney Lynch, Jonathan Schaffi. Incidence of postpartum depression in low-income cannabis users with and without a history of depression. Archives of women's mental health. 2023-11-01. PMID:37910199. there was an increased risk of screening positive for ppd among prenatal cannabis users compared to non-users (arr = 1.60, 95% ci: (1.05, 2.45)). 2023-11-01 2023-11-08 human
Anastasia Lendel, Ria Richards, Jason Benedict, Courtney Lynch, Jonathan Schaffi. Incidence of postpartum depression in low-income cannabis users with and without a history of depression. Archives of women's mental health. 2023-11-01. PMID:37910199. among individuals with a history of depression, the adjusted relative risk of screening positive for symptoms of ppd at the postpartum visit was 1.62 times greater in cannabis users compared to non-users (95% ci: (1.02, 2.58)). 2023-11-01 2023-11-08 human
Oscar F Borja-Montes, Hamza Hanif, Mohammed A Quazi, Amir H Sohail, Margaret A Roth, Alexandra C Millhuff, Abu Baker Sheik. Venous Thromboembolism and Cannabis consumption, outcomes among hospitalized patients in the United States: A Nationwide Analysis. Current problems in cardiology. 2023-10-31. PMID:37907189. although in-hospital mortality was initially lower for cannabis users (2.8% vs. 5.1%, or 0.6, 95% ci 0.69-0.94, p=0.008), this difference became non-significant post-propensity-score matching (aor 0.9, 95% ci 0.72-1.10, p=0.3). 2023-10-31 2023-11-08 Not clear
Palani S Mohanraj, Arani Das, Aniruddha Sen, Manoj Prithvira. Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor Levels in Cannabis Use Disorders - A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Cureus. vol 15. issue 9. 2023-10-30. PMID:37900486. the findings of our study suggest that the effect size of bdnf levels was 0.25 with 95% ci (-0.55; 1.05) in cannabis users, which was not statistically significant (p-value=0.54). 2023-10-30 2023-11-08 Not clear
Lyndsay A Avalos, Nina Oberman, Stacey E Alexeeff, Lisa A Croen, Sara R Adams, Meghan Davignon, Kelly C Young-Wolf. Association between maternal prenatal cannabis use and missed child preventive care visits in an integrated health care delivery system in Northern California. Preventive medicine. vol 175. 2023-10-07. PMID:37775081. compared to no use, maternal prenatal cannabis use was associated with more missed well-child visits at every time period; (missed 12-month visit: adjusted relative risk (arr): 1.43, 95%ci: 1.32-1.54; missed 3-year visit: arr: 1.15, 95%ci: 1.11-1.20). 2023-10-07 2023-10-15 Not clear
Roberta Noseda, Matteo Franchi, Alberto Pagnamenta, Laura Müller, Alison M Dines, Isabelle Giraudon, Fridtjof Heyerdahl, Florian Eyer, Knut Erik Hovda, Matthias E Liechti, Òscar Miró, Odd Martin Vallersnes, Christopher Yates, Paul I Dargan, David M Wood, Alessandro Ceschi, On Behalf Of The Euro-DEN Plus Research Grou. Determinants of Admission to Critical Care Following Acute Recreational Drug Toxicity: A Euro-DEN Plus Study. Journal of clinical medicine. vol 12. issue 18. 2023-09-28. PMID:37762912. conversely, lower odds of admission to critical care were associated with the use of cocaine (aor 0.85, 95% ci 0.74-0.99), cannabis (aor 0.44, 95% ci 0.37-0.52), heroin (aor 0.80, 95% ci 0.69-0.93), and amphetamine (aor 0.65, 95% ci 0.54-0.78), as was the arrival to the ed during the night (8 p.m.-8 a.m., aor 0.88, 95% ci 0.79-0.98). 2023-09-28 2023-10-07 Not clear
Tara Carney, Seul Ki Choi, Rob Stephenson, Jose A Bauermeister, Adam W Carric. Latent class analysis of substance use typologies associated with mental and sexual health outcomes among sexual and gender minority youth. PloS one. vol 18. issue 9. 2023-09-28. PMID:37768906. multivariate logistic regression results indicated that participants in the high polysubstance use (aor = 5.48, 95% ci 1.51, 19.97) and high cannabis use class (aor = 3.87, 95% ci 1.25, 11.94) were significantly more likely than those in the low substance use with moderate cannabis use class to report previous arrest. 2023-09-28 2023-10-07 human
Tara Carney, Seul Ki Choi, Rob Stephenson, Jose A Bauermeister, Adam W Carric. Latent class analysis of substance use typologies associated with mental and sexual health outcomes among sexual and gender minority youth. PloS one. vol 18. issue 9. 2023-09-28. PMID:37768906. those in the high polysubstance use class were also significantly less likely to have been tested for hiv than those in the low substance use with moderate cannabis use class (aor = 0.21, 95% ci 0.05, 0.93). 2023-09-28 2023-10-07 human
Felicia A Browne, Yukiko Washio, William A Zule, Wendee M Wechsber. HIV-related risk among justice-involved young African American women in the U.S. South. Health & justice. vol 11. issue 1. 2023-08-24. PMID:37615878. in adjusted analyses, several substance use and sexual risk variables were found to be significant, including increased odds of positive screens for both cocaine (aor: 3.09; 95% ci [1.49, 6.41]) and marijuana (aor: 1.82; 95% ci [1.17, 2.83]), trading sex for goods (aor: 2.23; 95% ci [1.14, 4.38]), and recent sexually transmitted infections (aor: 1.84; 95% ci [1.03, 3.27]). 2023-08-24 2023-09-07 human
Ryan D Assaf, Rita Hamad, Marjan Javanbakht, Onyebuchi A Arah, Steven J Shoptaw, Ziva D Cooper, Pamina M Gorbac. Associations of U.S. state-level COVID-19 policies intensity with cannabis sharing behaviors in 2020. Research square. 2023-08-14. PMID:37577641. in adjusted models, the odds of any cannabis sharing per every 5-unit increase in the average covid-19 policy score were 0.78 (95% ci 0.58, 1.04). 2023-08-14 2023-08-16 human
Jamie Corroon, Igor Grant, Matthew A Allison, Ryan Bradle. Associations Between Monthly Cannabis Use and Myocardial Infarction in Middle-Aged Adults: NHANES 2009 to 2018, Corroon et al. The American journal of cardiology. vol 204. 2023-08-09. PMID:37556891. in fully adjusted multivariable models, and compared with never use, a history of monthly cannabis use preceding an mi was not associated with an mi (odds ratio [or] 0.78, 95% confidence interval [ci] 0.35 to 1.71). 2023-08-09 2023-08-16 Not clear
Shawn A Thomas, Kristen D Clements-Nolle, Karla D Wagner, Stanley Omaye, Minggen Lu, Wei Yan. Adverse childhood experiences, antenatal stressful life events, and marijuana use during pregnancy: A population-based study. Preventive medicine. 2023-08-05. PMID:37543311. compared to people who reported no aces, those reporting 1 ace (adjusted prevalence ratio[apr] = 1.96, 95% confidence interval [ci] = 1.30-2.94), 3 aces (apr = 3.58, 95%ci = 2.69-4.77), and 4+ aces (apr = 3.67, 95%ci = 2.36-5.72) were more likely to use marijuana. 2023-08-05 2023-08-14 Not clear