Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

UK: Cannabis: good for pain but bad for your health?

Dr Thomas Stuttaford

The Times

Monday 24 Oct 2005

---
The drug can be used as an analgesic, but there are still risks in its
recreational use
A glance at last week's papers shows that cartoonists have had a field day
over the political implications of research into cannabis smoking. The
power of the cartoonist and satirist, which reached its zenith in Georgian
and Victorian times, is still great. In those days, cannabis would have
been considered small beer. Even Queen Victoria wasn't averse to using
opium for relief of the kind of everyday pain that people today would take
a Veganin tablet to control. Opioid tinctures were still the standard basis
of cough medicines in my youth.

Rather more is now known about the potential side- effects of drugs, and
legislators, as well as doctors, are rightly more chary about their
medicinal use. Possibly as a result of all the publicity surrounding the
political ramifications of cannabis smoking, the latest research published
on its use as a pain reliever in patients suffering from multiple
sclerosis, published in the journal Neurology, has received little attention.

A group of 66 patients with moderate to severe MS, the majority of whom
required support to walk or were wheelchair-bound, took part in a trial of
Sativex, a cannabis-based medicine. The patients had found that their
existing analgesics had failed to control their pain - a problem in 52 per
cent of patients with advanced multiple sclerosis, a third of whom describe
the pain they suffer as being frequently disabling and inadequately
managed. Half of the study patients received Sativex (in the form of an
oral spray), the others were a control. All continued with other medication
throughout the trial. Those taking the cannabis-based Sativex experienced a
clinicially significant improvement in the reduction of both the pain and
insomnia.

Earlier research into the use of other cannabis preparations to treat
neuropathic pain has shown that the patients are not exempt from
experiencing the adverse psychiatric effects associated with cannabis.

Discussion about cannabis smoking, whether among the student population or
older, and whether inhaled or not, is a relic of earlier puritanical
generations. What really matters is its long-term effect on both physical
and mental health. Recent research has confirmed that cannabis smoking may
induce psychotic-type breakdowns, and relatively frequently unmasks latent
hereditary psychiatric disease, as well as causing psychological changes.

A report by leading Swedish scientists in 1998 - not a group that would be
thought of as natural conservatives - summarised the psychological and
psychiatric problems that may be induced by its use. They concluded:
"Cannabis is one of the most psycho-pathogenic of all psychotic
preparations. Compared with heroin abuse, cannabis smoking, in addition to
the strong grip which develops with dependence, is associated with the far
more serious risk of developing mental disorders of various kinds."

A person who suffers a psychotic breakdown after cannabis, had he not
smoked it, might well have journeyed happily through life being no more
than mildly eccentric. Research indicates that one person in four has the
genes that might make them vulnerable to cannabis. Disturbingly, research
has also shown that to inherit various packages of genes that might be
associated with a vulnerability to cannabis is not rare. Cannabis's adverse
effects may be dose-dependent but there is no way of determining who these
people are. Cannabis will also cause psychological changes. These include
poor memory, shortened attention span and lack of judgment and/or insight,
as well as apathy, although the extent of this symptom is disputed.

The physical effects of cannabis include damage to the immune system, the
lungs and the oral and nasal spaces. This last association accounts for the
clear link between smoking cannabis and an increased incidence of head and
neck cancers. Cannabis has an adverse effect on the reproductive system in
men and women. In women it may cause ovulatory and menstrual
irregularities, and in men can cause testicular atrophy with a marked
reduction in sperm count.

The babies born to cannabis-smoking couples are, on average, shorter, have
a lower birth weight and reduced head circumference, and after delivery are
more restless and nervous. As children they have an appreciably higher
incidence of one form of leukaemia, have poorer memories and verbal ability
as toddlers, and do less well in intelligence tests up to the age of 9.

In rodents there is an increased incidence of foetal abnormalities and
stillbirths in those given cannabis. Similarly, a long-term project
evaluating the effect of cannabis on rhesus monkeys, either before or
during pregnancy, showed that it quadrupled the death rate of babies in
utero or soon after birth. There was also a higher incidence of congenital
neurological deformities. Although there have been reports of similar
findings in humans, a relationship between cannabis and foetal abnormality
is difficult to prove.

 

 

 

After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.




This page was created by the Cannabis Campaigners' Guide.
Feel free to link to this page!