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US: Long-Term Pot-Use Study - No Ill Health Effects

Peter Gorman

High Times, US

Wednesday 01 Aug 2001

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LONG-TERM POT-USE STUDY: NO ILL HEALTH EFFECTS


The government says smoking pot is bad for your health, particularly in
the long run. But four of the seven people it supplies have been looked
at from every angle, and researchers conclude that their marijuana use
hasn't hurt them a bit.


MISSOULA, MT-In the first study of its kind, four recipients of
federally provided medical marijuana were examined for the health
effects of their long-term cannabis use-and none showed any serious
adverse effects.

The Missoula Chronic Clinical Cannabis Use Study-headed by Montana
neurologist Dr. Ethan Russo and Virginia nurse Mary Lynn Mathre,
cofounder of Patients Out of Time-investigated "the therapeutic benefits
and adverse effects" among patients receiving cannabis through the
department of Health and Human Services' Compassionate Investigational
New Drug program. That program was closed to new applicants in 1991, but
continues to supply medical marijuana to seven patients. The four
patients studied-one with glaucoma, one with chronic musculoskeletal
pain, one with spasm and nausea, and one with spasticity from multiple
sclerosis-were run through a battery of tests, including magnetic-
resonance-imaging brain scans, chest X-rays, and neuropsychological,
immunological and pulmonary-functions tests. The study provided the
first opportunity to investigate the long-term physical effects of
cannabis-smoking on patients who used a "known dosage of a standardized,
heat-sterilized, quality-controlled supply of low-grade marijuana for
10-19 years."

The results, which will be published in the Journal of Cannabis
Therapeutics in January 2002, showed "all four patients are stable with
respect to their chronic conditions, and are taking many fewer standard
pharmaceuticals than previously." Mild changes in pulmonary function
were found in two of the four, but no cancer cells were detected. No
other negative functions were discovered.

The study, conducted at St. Patrick's Hospital in Missoula, Montana, was
sponsored by Patients Out of Time and funded by outside individuals.

"This is a positive result using a poor-quality medicine. What could we
expect using a better quality cannabis?" Al Byrne, Patients Out of
Time's other cofounder, told HT. Asked whether he thought the study
would result in a reopening of the Compassionate IND program, Byrne
bristled. "No. I don't think it will, but it should. I think the study's
effect on the government will be that they will no longer be able to say
that long-term therapeutic cannabis use is bad for you. But will the
federal government pay it any heed? Probably not."

When asked why it took a nonprofit to organize the study rather than the
government, Byrne noted that "I suppose because they suspected the
result of the study would be positive and the government does not want
anything positive said about cannabis use as medicine. That's the bottom
line."

by Peter Gorman, Special to HighWitness News


 

 

 

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