Skip to content

Nicolas J. Schlienz

Johns Hopkins University

1 paper in the library · 37 citations · publishing 2018

Papers

“Hallucinations” Following Acute Cannabis Dosing: A Case Report and Comparison to Other Hallucinogenic Drugs

Cannabis and Cannabinoid Research April 2, 2018 Muhammad Waqas, Frederick S. Barrett, Nicolas J. Schlienz et al. 37 citations

A healthy 30-year-old man experienced auditory and visual hallucinations after inhaling vaporized cannabis containing 25 mg of THC in a controlled laboratory study. His scores on the Hallucinogen Rating Scale (HRS) were higher on the Volition, Intensity, Perception, and Somaesthesia subscales compared to maximum doses of cannabis, psilocybin, dextromethorphan, or salvinorin A from other studies. However, his Affect and Cognition subscale scores were lower than those for psilocybin and dextromethorphan, indicating the hallucinatory experience was qualitatively different from classic hallucinogens. The authors suggest cannabis-induced hallucinations may involve a unique pharmacological mechanism and should be considered as a potential adverse event in clinical cannabis use.