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UK: No smoke without fear

Robin Murray

The Guardian

Tuesday 17 Sep 2002

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As a consultant psychiatrist working in the Maudsley Hospital, which serves
the Brixton area, I have been surprised that in all the recent discussions
about cannabis, there has been virtually no mention of the drug's
relationship to psychosis.

Psychiatrists have known for 150 years that heavy consumption of cannabis
can produce hallucinations. This was thought to be rare and transient until
the 1980s when, as cannabis consumption rose across Europe and the USA, it
became apparent that people with chronic psychotic illnesses were more
likely to be daily consumers of cannabis. Here in Britain, for example,
people with schizophrenia do not take more alcohol, heroin, or ecstasy than
the rest of us - but they are twice as likely to smoke cannabis regularly.

Since people with schizophrenia have a miserable life, most psychiatrists
initially thought that if the odd spliff brought them some pleasure, what
was the harm? Then, in the mid-90s, a Dutch psychiatrist named Don Lintzen
from the University Clinic in Amsterdam noted that people with schizophrenia
who used a lot of cannabis had a much worse outcome than those who didn't.
This was confirmed by other studies, including a four-year follow-up at the
Maudsley Hospital. Those who continued to smoke cannabis were three times
more likely to develop a chronic illness than those who didn't.

Why does cannabis exacerbate psychosis? In schizophrenia, the hallucinations
result from an excess of a brain chemical called dopamine. All the drugs
that cause psychosis - amphetamines, cocaine and cannabis - increase the
release of dopamine in the brain. In this way, they are distinct from
illicit drugs such as heroin or morphine, which do not make psychosis worse.

The distraught parents of a young man diagnosed with schizophrenia tell me
that their son was a very bright child with no obvious psychological
problems. Then, in his mid-teens, his school grades deteriorated and he
seemed to have trouble thinking clearly. He complained that people were
talking about him behind his back.

After years of increasingly bizarre behaviour, he dropped out of school, job
and university, and was finally admitted to a psychiatric unit, overwhelmed
by paranoid fears and persecution by voices. The parents tell me that, at
some point during this downward spiral, they realised their son was
dependent on cannabis. The National Schizophrenia Fellowship (Rethink) is
full of parents who see cannabis as the cause of their son's or, less
commonly, daughter's madness.

Psychiatrists began to wonder if cannabis could actually cause psychosis as
well as make established psychosis worse. A famous study interviewed 50,000
conscripts into the Swedish Army about their drug consumption and followed
them up. Those who were heavy consumers of cannabis at 18 were six times
more likely to be diagnosed with schizophrenia over the next 15 years than
those did not take it.

This year, Dutch epidemiologist Jim Van Os published the results of his
study, in which 7,500 people were interviewed about their drug consumption
and followed up for three years. Once again, regular consumers of cannabis
were more likely to develop psychosis than those who didn't. Two other
studies with similar findings are in progress.

It is perhaps surprising that it took the professionals so long to reach
this conclusion. For example, it is widely accepted in Jamaica that too much
ganja can cause paranoia. Several famous Rastafarians spent their last years
incarcerated in Bellevue, the squalid mental hospital in Kingston, among
them the legendary ska trombonist, Don Drummond.

Cannabis is now one of the biggest problems on in-patient psychiatric wards
in England's major cities. It is common at Maudsley for those making
progress to relapse suddenly. The explanation comes when a urine sample
tests positive for cannabis. The same effect has been shown at Yale Medical
School, where volunteers were given THC - the major active ingredient of
cannabis - by injection. Psychotic symptoms could be produced in normal
subjects, and people with schizophrenia had a brief exacerbation of their
psychosis.

So will reclassifying cannabis cause more people to become psychotic? The
incidence of schizophrenia in south London has doubled since the 1960s; the
use of cannabis and cocaine could be a factor. The increase in the
prevalence and the deteriorating outcomes of schizophrenia due to cannabis
use is the main reason why psychiatric services in London are in such a mess.

Any public debate on cannabis needs to take account of the risks as well as
the pleasure. Pro-marijuana campaigners claim, extrapolating from their
Saturday-night joint, that cannabis is totally safe. Yet they would be
unlikely to claim that a bottle of vodka a day is healthy on the basis of
sharing a bottle of Chablis over dinner.

No drugs that alter brain chemistry are totally safe. Just as some who drink
heavily become alcoholic, so a minority of those who smoke cannabis daily go
psychotic. Society has to balance the enjoyment that the majority get from
cannabis with the harm it causes to a vulnerable few.

- Robin Murray is professor of psychiatry at the Institute of Psychiatry,
and consultant psychiatrist at the Maudsley Hospital.

 

 

 

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