cannabis withdrawal associated_with cannabis dependence
Evidence from:
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Evidence (8 sources)
A genetic perspective on the proposed inclusion of cannabis withdrawal in DSM-5.
(2013)
PMID:23194657
cited
genetic variation in withdrawal ... that in abuse/dependence supports a common biological basis
confidence: 0.95
A genetic perspective on the proposed inclusion of cannabis withdrawal in DSM-5.
(2013)
PMID:23194657
cited
genetic variation in cannabis withdrawal ... shared with that of cannabis abuse/dependence
confidence: 0.95
A genetic perspective on the proposed inclusion of cannabis withdrawal in DSM-5.
(2013)
PMID:23194657
cited
very high correlation between cannabis withdrawal and abuse/dependence due to near-complete sharing of genetic influences
confidence: 0.94
A genetic perspective on the proposed inclusion of cannabis withdrawal in DSM-5.
(2013)
PMID:23194657
cited
high correlation between cannabis withdrawal and abuse/dependence
confidence: 0.93
A genetic perspective on the proposed inclusion of cannabis withdrawal in DSM-5.
(2013)
PMID:23194657
cited
Variance in both variables overlaps greatly, due to very high genetic and environmental correlations between both variables.
confidence: 0.95
A genetic perspective on the proposed inclusion of cannabis withdrawal in DSM-5.
(2013)
PMID:23194657
cited
We found a very high correlation (r=0.92) between cannabis withdrawal and DSM-IV abuse/dependence; approximately 96% of participants that met criteria for cannabis withdrawal also exhibited DSM-IV abuse/dependence.
confidence: 0.95
A genetic perspective on the proposed inclusion of cannabis withdrawal in DSM-5.
(2013)
PMID:23194657
cited
We calculated the genetic correlation, a measure of the overlap in the genetic variation underlying cannabis withdrawal and abuse/dependence.
confidence: 0.95
correlation between the number of cannabis withdrawal symptoms and the number of DSM-IV cannabis dependence criteria ... was 0.64 (p<.001) among frequent cannabis-only users
confidence: 0.95