Verbal Memory Impairment in Polydrug Ecstasy Users: A Clinical Perspective
PLoS ONE February 23, 2016 Kim P. C. Kuypers, Eef L. Theunissen, Janelle H. P. van Wel et al. 23 citations
Verbal memory performance in people who use Ecstasy (MDMA) does not differ from that of healthy non-users when they are not under the drug's influence, and there is substantial evidence supporting no long-term memory deficit. Clinically significant memory impairment—defined as performance more than 1.5 standard deviations below the average of healthy controls—was absent during abstinence. However, during acute MDMA intoxication, verbal memory was impaired. Pooled data from four experimental studies compared 65 Ecstasy users tested on placebo with 65 matched drug-naïve controls. History of use did not predict memory impairment. The findings suggest that Ecstasy/MDMA use does not cause clinically deficient long-term verbal memory.