Jackeh
Bluelighter
Sorry if this is the wrong place but it was the most appropriate I could think for the question.
http://schizophrenia.com/smokereport.htm#over
I've read on this forum and some other sites that people with schizophrenia are far more likely to smoke cigarettes.
As the source above suggests, people with schizophrenia have "faulty sensory gating" which is apparently caused by a faulty nicotine receptor gene.
For some people (including me) cannabis may be anxiolytic. Now, I myself find that smoking cigarettes during these anxious phases will usually calm me down in the same way smoking cigarettes apparently helps people with schizophrenia.
I'm not saying that cannabis causes psychosis, I have read and accept that it may release underlying mental conditions but it won't create them itself. Is it possible that cannabis affects nicotine receptors in the same way that they might be different for people with schizophrenia, which is why smoking would calm paranoia/anxiety down when high? Or is there no actual link there and the anxiolytic effects are through a different mechanism?
http://schizophrenia.com/smokereport.htm#over
I've read on this forum and some other sites that people with schizophrenia are far more likely to smoke cigarettes.
As the source above suggests, people with schizophrenia have "faulty sensory gating" which is apparently caused by a faulty nicotine receptor gene.
The first is faulty sensory "gating," the ability to make sense of stimuli in the environment. People startle the first time they hear a loud noise such as a car alarm - but they're able to ignore it, or at least mute their reaction, when they hear it again and again.
Schizophrenics lack this "gating" capacity, which may explain some of the confusion and fear they feel in seemingly harmless situations.
As it turns out, the deficit is associated with a faulty gene that also happens to be a nicotine receptor gene. "When schizophrenia patients smoke, or are given nicotine gum, this deficit of sensory gating is reduced or normalized," Thaker said.
For some people (including me) cannabis may be anxiolytic. Now, I myself find that smoking cigarettes during these anxious phases will usually calm me down in the same way smoking cigarettes apparently helps people with schizophrenia.
I'm not saying that cannabis causes psychosis, I have read and accept that it may release underlying mental conditions but it won't create them itself. Is it possible that cannabis affects nicotine receptors in the same way that they might be different for people with schizophrenia, which is why smoking would calm paranoia/anxiety down when high? Or is there no actual link there and the anxiolytic effects are through a different mechanism?
