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AUS: Cannabis combats heart attack, stroke

The Australian

Saturday 14 May 2005

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A COMPOUND derived from the cannabis plant protects blood vessels from
dangerous clogging, a study of mice has shown. The discovery could lead to
new drugs to ward off heart disease and stroke.

The compound, called delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), combats the
blood-vessel disease atherosclerosis in mice. This disease occurs when
damage to blood vessels, by nicotine from cigarettes, for example, causes
an immune response that leads to the formation of fatty deposits in arteries.
These deposits form because the immune cells can linger too long,
recruiting others and leading to an inflamed blockage that snares fatty
molecules. The disease is the leading cause of heart disease and stroke in
the developed world.

THC seems to tone down this immune response, reports Francois Mach of the
University Hospital Geneva, Switzerland, and his colleagues. The compound
binds to a protein called CB2 that is present on the surfaces of certain
immune cells.

Mach's team administered tiny amounts of pure THC to mice. The treatment
reduced the progression of blood-vessel blockage formation by more than
one-third, the researchers reported in Nature (2005;434:782-786).

Furthermore, feeding the mice a compound that interferes with binding to
CB2 abolished the therapeutic effect of THC. This proves that the process
involves the CB2 protein rather than a similar protein called CB1, which is
found on cells in the brain and nervous system and is responsible for
cannabis's psychological effects.

The benefits for atherosclerosis occurred only at a certain dosage, Mach
adds - at higher and lower doses THC has no therapeutic effect on blood
vessels. He notes the similarly moderated effects of alcohol on heart
disease, adding that one glass of Bordeaux may reduce risk while
overindulgence can increase it.

The team also emphasises that the THC dose required to protect blood
vessels is lower, relative to body weight, than that which would produce
the mind-altering altering effects of cannabis in humans. "This paper has
nothing to do with smoking marijuana," Mach stresses.

"It does not mean that smoking cannabis is beneficial to the cardiovascular
system, as cannabis smoke contains many toxins which may actually lead to
cardiovascular diseases," says Michael Randall of the University of
Nottingham Medical School, UK, who has studied cardiovascular disease and
cannabinoids.

"The body also produces its own cannabis-like chemicals and whether they
may play a role in the above beneficial effects is unclear," he adds.

THC could be deployed alongside currently used cholesterol-controlling
drugs called statins to fight atherosclerosis, Mach suggests. "I don't
think this will replace statins. But we may add another compound that will
fight against inflammation," he explains.

Because THC might suppress the immune system in a general way, there is a
danger that it may harm the body's ability to fight infection. To avoid
this, Mach says, it may be necessary to identify similar compounds that
specifically target the CB2 protein.

Still, the discovery adds to the range of potential medicinal benefits of
cannabis compounds. Besides its well-publicised use for pain relief, the
drug is also given to anorexics to stimulate appetite, and cancer patients
to combat the nauseating side-effects of chemotherapy



 

 

 

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