Article  What you aren’t hearing about marijuana’s health effects (Sleepy Joe?)

#1
C C Offline
https://www.wsj.com/articles/what-you-ar..._permalink

EXCERPTS: . . . While marijuana use remains a federal crime, 24 states have legalized it and another 14 permit it for medical purposes. Last week media outlets reported that the Biden administration is moving to reclassify marijuana as a less dangerous Schedule III drug—on par with anabolic steroids and Tylenol with codeine—which would provide tax benefits and a financial boon to the pot industry.

Bertha Madras thinks this would be a colossal mistake. Ms. Madras, 81, is a psychobiology professor at Harvard Medical School and one of the foremost experts on marijuana. “It’s a political decision, not a scientific one,” she says. “And it’s a tragic one.” In 2024, that is a countercultural view.

Ms. Madras has spent 60 years studying drugs, starting with LSD when she was a graduate student at Allan Memorial Institute of Psychiatry, an affiliate of Montreal’s McGill University, in the 1960s. “I was interested in psychoactive drugs because I thought they could not only give us some insight into how the brain works, but also on how the brain undergoes dysfunction and disease states,” she says.

In 2015 the World Health Organization asked her to do a detailed review of cannabis and its medical uses. The 41-page report documented scant evidence of marijuana’s medicinal benefits and reams of research on its harms, from cognitive impairment and psychosis to car accidents.

She continued to study marijuana, including at the addiction neurobiology lab she directs at Mass General Brigham McLean Hospital. In a phone interview this week, she walked me through the scientific literature on marijuana, which runs counter to much of what Americans hear in the media.

For starters, she says, the “addiction potential of marijuana is as high or higher than some other drug,” especially for young people. About 30% of those who use cannabis have some degree of a use disorder. By comparison, only 13.5% of drinkers are estimated to be dependent on alcohol. Sure, alcohol can also cause harm if consumed in excess. But Ms. Madras sees several other distinctions.

[...] marijuana does more lasting damage to the brain than alcohol, especially at the high potencies being consumed today. Levels of THC—the main psychoactive ingredient in pot—are four or more times as high as they were 30 years ago. That heightens the risks, which range from anxiety and depression to impaired memory and cannabis hyperemesis syndrome—cycles of severe vomiting caused by long-term use.

There’s mounting evidence that cannabis can cause schizophrenia....

[...] Marijuana has also been associated with violent behavior...

[...] Another cause for concern, she notes, is that more pregnant women are using pot, which has been linked to increased preterm deliveries, admissions of newborns into neonatal intensive care units, lower birth weights and smaller head circumferences. THC crosses the placenta and mimics molecules that our bodies naturally produce that regulate brain development....

[...] What about medicinal benefits? Ms. Madras says she has reviewed “every single case of therapeutic indication for marijuana—and there are over 100 now that people have claimed—and I frankly found that the only one that came close to having some evidence from randomized controlled trials was the neuropathic pain studies.” That’s “a very specific type of pain, which involves damage to nerve endings like in diabetes or where there’s poor blood supply,” she explains.

[...] It’s a travesty, Ms. Madras adds, that the “FDA has decided that they’re going to listen to that movement rather than to what the science says.” While the reclassification wouldn’t make recreational marijuana legal under federal law, dispensaries and growers would be able to deduct their business expenses on their taxes. The rescheduling would also send a cultural signal that marijuana use is normal.... (MORE - missing details)
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#2
stryder Offline
I'd still question the method that people used the substances during the trials (smoking versus digestion etc), as they do actually make a difference.

Smoking for instance might mean having tobacco products mixed in (adding Nicotine which is highly and physically addictive) as well as the toxicology of the break down of materials into smoke such as left over pesticides, fertilizers, fungicides etc.

The toxicity in smoke is far more damaging to cell structures and would find it's way through the bloodbrain barrier, and is more likely to be the cause of Schizophrenia considering even just Nicotine can increase bipolopic events.

The human brain, specifically the spinal fluid can contain the bodies own natural production of THC2, to my knowledge it's usage is actually as a way for the body to protect the brain both at a cellular level as well as from inflammation if the head suffers from trauma or even allergic reactions.

To be honest Caffine is potentially more likely to cause schizophrenia, since it's known it can cause brain shrinkage during usage. (That'a be "Cuppa Joe!")
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#3
Syne Offline
If nicotine, pesticides, fertilizers, fungicides, etc. led to schizophrenia that would be even bigger news, and no doubt, a bigger publishing payoff for an academic career.

We were able to adjust for alcohol and other specific drug use disorders in our study, but not for tobacco use or tobacco use disorder, which has also been linked to psychosis in some (Gurillo, Jauhar, Murray, & MacCabe, Reference Gurillo, Jauhar, Murray and MacCabe2015) but not all studies (Fergusson, Hall, Boden, & Horwood, Reference Fergusson, Hall, Boden and Horwood2015).
- https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/...26C3641A68


One of the causes of psychosis can be schizophrenia, but no mention of a specific link between tobacco and schizophrenia.
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