Artículos de revistas
Neuropsychological Assessment of Current and Past Crack Cocaine Users
Fecha
2009Registro en:
SUBSTANCE USE & MISUSE, v.44, n.13, p.1941-1957, 2009
1082-6084
10.3109/10826080902848897
Autor
OLIVEIRA, Lucio Garcia De
BARROSO, Lucia Pereira
SILVEIRA, Camila Magalhaes
SANCHEZ, Zila Van Der Meer
PONCE, Julio De Carvalho
VAZ, Leonardo Jose
NAPPO, Solange Aparecida
Institución
Resumen
Background: Cognitive changes due to crack cocaine consumption remain unclear Methods: For clarification, 55 subjects were assigned to three groups: control group, crack cocaine current users, and ex-users. Participants were submitted to Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) and tasks evaluating executive functioning and verbal memory Mood state was also measured. Intergroup comparisons were carried out. Results: Control group performance on the MMSE was better than that of users and ex-users. Verbal memory performance for logical memory of users was impaired. Ex-users scored lower on DSST and Trail Making Test (Part B). Conclusion: Chronic crack cocaine use seems to disrupt general cognitive functioning (MMSE), verbal memory, and attentional resources, but findings suggest that some of these effects could be reversed by abstinence.