Medical evidence on marijuana blows both ways

Medical Evidence On Marijuana Blows Both Ways
Legalization debate is waging in America once again, but what does the research say?

By Sam McManis

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A customer holds up marijuana bought from a San Francisco, California medical marijuana dispensary in this February 2006 file photo. –McClatchy Newspapers
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Medical evidence on marijuana blows both ways –Bloomberg

Sparked anew by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s call for the state to study the legalization of marijuana, both sides in the smoldering pot debate point to research to bolster their positions.Such recitation of conflicting marijuana studies can be manipulated and selected buffet-style to serve whatever political and health agenda is being touted.

Even governmental findings can be contradictory. In 1999, for instance, the Office of National Drug Control Policy asked the Institute of Medicine to review evidence. The institute found that, “except for the harms associated with smoking, the adverse effects of marijuana use are within the range of effects tolerated for other medications.”

Yet in 2006, the Food and Drug Administration ruled that marijuana has no health benefits and has known and proven harms. It is classified a Schedule 1 drug – the highest risk of addiction – in the Controlled Substances Act.

Wading through the medical literature, though, makes those conclusions less cut and dried.

“When I was a resident in Kaiser in San Francisco in 1978, I gave a lecture to physicians on marijuana, and I remember my conclusion at that time was that you can find in the literature whatever you were looking for,” says Dr. Donald Abrams, a University of California, San Francisco, oncologist and leading medical marijuana researcher. “‘Marijuana is good for asthma.”Marijuana’s bad for asthma.”Marijuana causes schizophrenia.”Marijuana (decreases) schizophrenia.’ And, the evidence is still like that.”

There are many factors, of course. As noted by UCLA pulmonologist Dr. Donald Tashkin, who has studied marijuana’s effects on the lungs for three decades, “That’s just the nature of medical science. You have to deal with variability. The population studied may be different or the methods used to study may differ.”

Yet when the arguments for legalization of marijuana, both for medicinal and recreational use, are put forth, solid medical science often gets clouded in an ideological haze.

“Although we like to say we separate politics from science, with medical marijuana, that’s really difficult,” Abrams says. “It depends on who does the study, where it’s published and their agenda.”

Bearing in mind those caveats, here is a look at the research on marijuana’s effect in areas critical to health.

Lungs

UCLA’s Tashkin studied heavy marijuana smokers to determine whether the use led to increased risk of lung cancer and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or COPD. He hypothesized that there would be a definitive link between cancer and marijuana smoking, but the results proved otherwise.

“What we found instead was no association and even a suggestion of some protective effect,” says Tashkin, whose research was the largest case-control study ever conducted. The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health.

Tobacco smokers in the study had as much as a 21-fold increase in lung cancer risk. Cigarette smokers, too, developed COPD more often in the study, and researchers found that marijuana did not impair lung function.

Tashkin, supported by other research, concluded that the active ingredient tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, has an “anti-tumoral effect” in which “cells die earlier before they age enough to develop mutations that might lead to lung cancer.”

However, the smoke from marijuana did swell the airways and lead to a greater risk of chronic bronchitis.

“Early on, when our research appeared as if there would be a negative impact on lung health, I was opposed to legalization because I thought it would lead to increased use and that would lead to increased health effects,” Tashkin says. “But at this point, I’d be in favor of legalization. I wouldn’t encourage anybody to smoke any substances. But I don’t think it should be stigmatized as an illegal substance. Tobacco smoking causes far more harm. And in terms of an intoxicant, alcohol causes far more harm.”

Cognitive function

A 2006 study in the journal Neurology found that speed of thinking, attention and verbal fluency were affected as much as 70 percent by long-term heavy use (four or more joints per week).

But a 2003 review of literature in the Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society found that marijuana smoking had a “small effect” on memory in longtime users.

However, users had no lasting effects in reaction time, attention or verbal function. “Surprisingly, we saw very little evidence of deleterious effects,” Dr. Igor Grant, researcher at the University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine, said in a statement.

A 2002 study in the Journal of the American Medical Association found that heavy users did worse on recall memory tests. A 2006 study in Greece showed users had slower mental-processing speed than the control group. Then again, a 2007 study at the University of Lausanne in Switzerland, published in Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, found that students who smoked marijuana had better grades than those who used only tobacco or those who did not smoke any substance.

In terms of brain development, a 2000 study in the Journal of Addictive Diseases found changes in brain structure in those who started using marijuana before age 17 but not in those who started at an older age. A 2009 Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia study used brain imaging to show that heavy adolescent users are more likely to have disrupted brain development in regions involving memory, attention, decision making and language. But a 2008 Ohio State University study found that marijuana can reduce brain inflammation and perhaps reduce memory impairment that could delay Alzheimer’s disease.

Psychosis

Yes, there is an increased risk in psychotic behaviour and long-term risk of mental illness from marijuana use, according to a 2007 review of literature commissioned by Great Britain’s Department of Health and published in the Lancet.

But the risk is small, because the risk of developing psychosis in the general population is 3 percent over a lifetime and rises to 5 percent for marijuana users, lead researcher Stanley Zammit told the Los Angeles Times. “So 95 percent of the people are not going to get psychotic, even if they smoke on a daily basis,” he told the paper.

In 2005, New Zealand researchers studied a group of people with a gene variant the researchers believe predisposes that group to developing psychosis. Those in the group who smoked marijuana as teens had a tenfold increase in risk of psychosis than those who abstained.

Depression

A study published in 2001 in the American Journal of Psychiatry followed nearly 2,000 adults over 15 years. It found that marijuana users who had no symptoms of depression at the start were four times more likely than non-users of developing symptoms during that time frame.

In 2008, the U.S. Office of National Drug Control Policy stated that early marijuana use could increase the likelihood of mental illness by as much as 40 percent later in life.

However, researchers at McGill University in Montreal in 2007 reported in the Journal of Neuroscience that THC in low doses actually serves as an antidepressant similar to Prozac, producing serotonin. But at higher doses, they found it could lead to depression and psychotic episodes.

Source: Taiwan News

3 Responses to Medical evidence on marijuana blows both ways
  1. momtojake
    June 5, 2009 | 8:29 am

    Kelli,

    Thanks for posting on the topic of medical marijuana use, a controversial subject at best. As you know, I’ve lived with chronic pain from various illnesses for the past 18 years, and am no stranger to the world of narcotics to be able to enjoy some quality of life. I have “lived” in the world of percocet and fentanyl which did little for my overall pain other than making me too sleepy that I would *almost* forget about my pain for a brief time.

    A few years ago, about 3 to be exact, I switched pain doctors to someone who specializes in treating chronic pelvic pain and fibromyalgia. It was one of the best decisions of my life and a very needed one at the time, as I could often be found huddled into the fetal position of my office at the hospital as I was doing my internship. After listening to my experiences with short-acting narcotics, including a rapid withdrawal from fentanyl that I wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy, my pain doctor had prescribed me something called Cesamet. Cesamet (nabilone) is THC that has been extracted from the marijuana plant, and is often used in the treatment of MS and also for the nausea associated with chemotherapy.

    Cesamet had helped my pain levels decrease so much that I was actually successful in being able to make it through both of my social work internships providing quality work along the way. It doesn’t leave the user with any type of “high” feeling as may be experienced through smoking the actual plant, and takes away the risks to the lungs associated with smoking in general. At first it did make me more tired, however once my body had adjusted to the medication, it was a dream come true. Gone were the days of needing to take Gravol on top of the pain meds just to avoid being sick, the strong “fog” that short-acting opiods can create in users, the ever increasing tolerance levels… Back was the days of actually being able to function! I also used a THC product spray called Sativex for the relief of breakthrough pain that I occasionally experienced.

    What’s interesting to note in the article is that they speak of the risks of addiction. To me, I would think that there would be an equal risk of addiction to stronger meds such as demerol and vicodins and yet the risk of addiction seemed to be overlooked in this case.

    I do hope that one day our options for adequate pain relief as increased, and if it means legalizing marijuana in order to be able to provide such options to others, then that is what must be done.

    Thanks again and take care!
    Melissa

  2. Kelli
    June 5, 2009 | 11:08 am

    I have had a doctor suggest Cesamet, but I’m not sure if it’s approved here, and you are the first person who I’ve heard to have used it..

    I am so glad it relieves your pain. :)

  3. JeannetteNL
    June 16, 2009 | 2:20 pm

    I think the topic of marijuana will still be debated long after I’m gone…I will truthfully admit that I have tried it for my chronic pain, however, I can not stand having that so called “high” feeling that people chase after. I much prefer to remain clear headed and in control and it made me feel mentally slow without the amount of pain control I expected…I take enough narcotics to take down a large horse, yet it still only reduces my pain by 30-40%.

    Sometimes I wonder if I am being unrealistic to want my pain 100% controlled, perhaps that is not even possible? It is a sad state to be in any way you look at it. For many years, I did not even have so much as a tylenol in my house, now I could literally stock a pharmacy…No fun being chronically ill.

    My opinion however, about the marijuana-I think if it helps people control their pain, GIVE IT TO THEM. It is usually those that have no idea what it is like to suffer that decide what can be put to market & what can not. If it worked for me, I would move heaven and earth to get it. The bottom line is that suffering 24/7 with chronic pain is nothing short of hell and I wouldn’t wish it on anyone;I would however wish good pain control by WHATEVER MEANS NECESSARY for everyone. It’s the humane thing to do.

    Thanks so much for posting this piece.

    Take care,
    Jeannette
    http://missingmythyroid.blogspot.com/

    P.S. Thank you for taking the time to read and comment to my blog-I really appreciate it! :>)

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