Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


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

US: Is pot good for you?

John Cloud

Time Magazine (US)

Monday 04 Nov 2002

---
Well, No. But the Latest Research Suggests the Health Risk From Occasional
Use Is Mild, and It Might Ease Certain Ills

I never smoked pot in junior high because I was convinced it would shrivel
my incipient manhood. This was the 1980s, and those stark
this-is-your-brain-on-drugs ads already had me vaguely worried about memory
loss and psychosis. But when other boys said pot might affect our southern
regions, I was truly terrified. I didn't smoke a joint for the first time
until I was 21.

By 12th grade, about half of young Americans have tried marijuana, which
put me in the geeky other half. I used to think this was a good thing,
since I never developed a taste for pot and avoided becoming
dependent. But as the medical-marijuana movement flowered and weed's
p.r. improved, I often wondered if I shouldn't have relished it as a kid,
before I had a personal trainer to tsk-tsk my every vice. Shrinking
testicles? Mushy brains? I came to see these as grotesqueries invented by
antidrug propagandists.

It turns out that the study of marijuana's health effects is at once more
complex and less advanced than you might imagine. "Interpretations [of
marijuana research] may tell more about [one's] own biases than the data,"
writes Mitch Earleywine in Understanding Marijuana: A New Look at the
Scientific Evidence , published in August by Oxford. For example:
"Prohibitionists might mention that THC [delta-9 tetra-hydrocannabinol, the
smile-producing chemical in pot] often appears in the blood of people in
auto accidents. Yet they might omit the fact that most of these people
also drank alcohol. Antiprohibitionists might cite a large study that
showed no sign of memory problems in chronic marijuana smokers. Yet they
might not mention that the tests were so easy that even a demented person
could perform them."

The science of marijuana--especially its potential medical uses--is
malleable because it's so young and so contradictory. Although preliminary
data are promising, scientists haven't definitively shown that the drug can
safely treat nausea or pain or anything, really. Some experts claim the
U.S. government has sabotaged medical-marijuana research, and there is
evidence to support them. Even so, in the past few years scientists have
made rapid advances in their basic understanding of how Cannabis sativa
works. By 1993, researchers had found the body's two known receptors for
cannabinoids, the psychoactive chemicals in the plant ( thc is the main
one, but there are at least 65 others ). Since then, there has been
important new work in several fields that users, potential users and former
users should know about--and that voters should take into account before
deciding whether to legalize pot.

So much new research has appeared that in November the Journal of Clinical
Pharmacology and the National Institute on Drug Abuse will publish a
100-page supplement devoted entirely to marijuana. The Journal gave Time
an advance look; it's a comprehensive review that will annoy both sides in
the drug war. You won't find clear evidence that pot is good or evil, but
the research sheds light on some of the most important questions
surrounding the drug:

Can It Kill You?

No one has ever died of THC poisoning, mostly because a 160-lb. person
would have to smoke roughly 900 joints in a sitting to reach a lethal
dose. ( No doubt some have tried. ) But that doesn't mean pot can't
contribute to serious health problems and even death--both indirectly (
driving while stoned, for instance ) and directly ( by affecting
circulation, for example ). A paper published last year in the journal
Angiology found 10 odd cases in France of heavy herbe smokers who developed
ischemia ( an insufficient blood supply ) in their limbs, leading in four
cases to amputations. It's not clear that marijuana caused the decreased
blood flow, but the vascular problems did worsen during periods of heavy
use. Another 2001 paper, in Circulation, found a nearly fivefold increase
in the risk for heart attack in the first hour after smoking
marijuana--though statistically that means smoking pot is about as
dangerous for a fit person as exercise.

Does It Make You Sick?

Marijuana may directly affect the immune system, since one of the body's
two known receptors for cannabinoids is located in immune cells. But the
nature of the effect is unclear. A recent study showed that THC inhibits
production of immune-stimulating substances. But cigarette smokers may do
greater harm to their immunity than pot users, who tend to smoke less. A
study published earlier this year found that tobacco smokers but not
marijuana smokers had high levels of a type of enzyme believed to inflame
the lungs. Dr. Donald Abrams, professor of clinical medicine at the
University of California, San Francisco, found that short-term cannabis use
doesn't substantially raise viral loads of HIV patients. ( People with HIV
sometimes smoke marijuana to stimulate appetite. ) In fact, his study
participants who smoked pot enjoyed significantly higher increases in their
lymphocytes ( cells that help fight disease ) than those who took a placebo.

Can It Give You Cancer?

Data on cancer also generate mixed conclusions. A 1999 study of 173
patients with head and neck cancers found that pot smoking elevated the
risk of such cancers. ( Smokers of anything should also worry about lung
cancer. ) But it's not clear that THC is carcinogenic. The latest
research suggests that THC may have a dual effect, promoting tumors by
increasing free radicals and simultaneously protecting against tumors by
playing a beneficial role in a process known as programmed cell death.

Is It Addictive?

Those who believe you can't become physically or psychologically dependent
on marijuana are wrong. At least three recent studies have demonstrated
that heavy pot smokers who quit can experience such withdrawal symptoms as
anxiety, difficulty sleeping and stomach pain. On the other hand, the risk
of becoming dependent on marijuana is comparatively low. Just 9% of those
who have used the drug develop dependence. By comparison, 15% of drinkers
become dependent on alcohol, 23% of heroin users get hooked, and a third of
tobacco smokers become slaves to cigarettes.

Does It Make You Stupid?

Potheads are dumber than nonusers, but only a little. Earlier this year,
the Journal of the American Medical Association published a study of 102
near-daily marijuana users who wanted to quit. The authors found that the
longer subjects had toked up, the worse their memories and attention
spans. But they were hardly like Gobi, the Saturday Night Live wastoid who
is so ruined he can barely talk. Participants who had used cannabis
regularly for an average of 10 years fared significantly worse on only two
of 40 indices of cognitive functioning ( they had particular trouble
estimating how much time had passed during a test ). Those stout folks who
had been smoking pot for an average of 24 years did significantly worse on
14 of the tests. But scientists can't say that marijuana causes such
problems. "These long-term users may have been worse off in the first
place, before they ever smoked marijuana," says Dr. Harrison Pope, a
Harvard psychiatrist who wrote an editorial accompanying the study arguing
that "we must live with uncertainty" on whether pot causes long-term
cognitive impairments.

What About Sex?

The latest studies suggest I needn't have fretted so much about pot's
gonadal consequences. "Marijuana might interfere with [kids'] ability to
go through puberty," says Dr. Adrian Dobs, co-author of a paper on the
endocrine effects of the drug in the upcoming Journal of Clinical
Pharmacology. "But the abnormalities seen are not really clinically
significant." Despite tales of male potheads growing breasts, the long-term
effects on adult glands are uncertain.

Do the Sick Really Benefit?

So if marijuana can be harmful to healthy people--but usually isn't--could
it actually be good for the sick? This is where the science gets
scraggier--and in the absence of data, politics takes over. What we know
is that healers have accumulated copious anecdotes on weed's powers over
the past 4,700 years. Understanding Marijuana author Earleywine credits a
( possibly mythical ) Chinese emperor with introducing the plant as a
treatment for gout around 2700 B.C. But the emperor also thought his pot
potion would help memory, making him the first of many fans to aggrandize
the drug's medical potential. The ancient Greek doc Galen even used the
drug to treat flatulence.

The A.M.A. issued a report last year summarizing the body of knowledge
about medical marijuana. It's shockingly slim. Dr. Abrams in San
Francisco has produced some of the clearest evidence to date of pot's
therapeutic value. Even though his clinical trial was designed merely to
investigate whether marijuana is safe for HIV patients, he also turned up
data that anyone who ever had the munchies already knew: pot makes you
hungry. Test subjects who smoked marijuana gained an average of 6.6
lbs. during the trial, compared with 2.4 lbs. for the group taking the
placebo. Some other findings from the A.M.A. report:

NAUSEA Patients who are HIV-positive or undergoing chemotherapy can have
trouble keeping food down, so anything that helps them eat is
significant--though not necessarily for the reasons marijuana boosters
think. Pot's ability to enhance appetite may have more to do with its high
and less to do with any direct effects on nausea. Only 20% to 25% of
patients in two 1980s trials could completely control vomiting with
marijuana; other drugs work better for emesis. Still, the
A.M.A. recommended more studies on marijuana for those who don't respond
to the other drugs, and it notes that for those feeling sick, inhaling a
substance may be more palatable than swallowing a pill.

GLAUCOMA Marijuana does reduce pressure on the eyeball, about 25%, but the
drug isn't always practical as a glaucoma treatment. Many who have the
disease are elderly and can't tolerate pot's tendency to raise heart rates.

SPASTICITY Marijuana can help people with spasticity ( extreme muscle
tension ) and tremor due to multiple sclerosis and trauma. But the drug
hasn't been rigorously compared with the standard antispastic treatments.

PAIN In patients with postoperative pain, THC is more effective than a
placebo, and some reports suggest smoking pot may reduce the need for
highly addictive opioids. But the A.M.A. says better-designed studies are
needed to properly evaluate pot as a painkiller. Several are under
way. In California, five teams of researchers are conducting studies of
marijuana as an analgesic, particularly for cancer and nerve pain.

The A.M.A. concludes that the lack of "high-quality clinical research
... continues to hamper development of rational public policy" on medical
marijuana. Which raises the question, Why, after five millenniums, doesn't
such research exist? Two possible answers: First, the government may have
rejected cannabis studies to avoid any challenge to its view that pot is
dangerous and medically useless. Second, pot may just be dangerous and
medically useless.

The drug wasn't always so controversial in the scientific
establishment. The U.S. Pharmacopeia, a doctors' listing of remedies
begun in 1820, first included cannabis in 1870. The Pharmacopeia didn't
drop pot until its 1942 edition, the first published after cannabis was
outlawed in 1937. Eventually most physicians began to view the drug as
little more than a crude intoxicant. They tended to favor new-fashioned
drugs that were refined by pharmaceutical firms into pure chemicals. Raw
marijuana contains some 400 compounds.

It wasn't until the '70s that modern methods were applied to test the
medicinal effects of cannabis. As Earleywine recounts, a UCLA study
designed to confirm police reports that pot dilates pupils found instead a
slight constriction. That's how doctors discovered the drug could help
glaucoma sufferers by reducing intraocular pressure. In the years after
that discovery, 26 states opened therapeutic research programs.

But the Federal Government, which by then controlled the only legal supply
of marijuana, had just passed the Controlled Substances Act of 1970. That
law placed marijuana in Schedule I, the designation for drugs without valid
medical use. State health officials found it difficult to persuade their
federal counterparts to give them cannabis for research, as doing so would
undermine the law, at least in spirit, by suggesting there were medical
uses. ( Only seven states got pot. One was Tennessee, which is why Al
Gore's sister was able to try the drug before losing her battle with lung
cancer in 1984. )

Then, in 1985, the Food and Drug Administration ( FDA ) approved
dronabinol, an oral form of synthetic THC, to treat chemotherapy-induced
nausea. Many doctors believed dronabinol, marketed as Marinol, could
provide the benefits of the plant without the impurities. By the mid-'80s,
the availability of Marinol and the escalating drug war had killed the
state research programs. But Marinol turned out to have
shortcomings. Because it enters the blood through the stomach, it doesn't
work as fast as smoked marijuana. Because it is essentially pure THC, its
users can get too high. "Marinol does tend to knock people out," says
Abrams, the San Francisco doctor who has conducted trials with both Marinol
and pot. "Our patients [taking Marinol] spent a lot of time in bed, and
that wasn't the case with those smoking marijuana." Such problems appeared
in only "a small portion of the patients in our clinical trials," says
Dr. Hjalmar Lagast, a vice president for Solvay Pharmaceuticals, which
makes Marinol. He notes that the drug comes in three strengths, allowing
doctors to pick the right dose. By the early '90s, at the height of the
U.S. AIDS epidemic, many patients so preferred marijuana to Marinol that
they would use the street drug regardless of legality or safety. Abrams
and a few others began pushing the government to permit new studies of
marijuana to find out what these patients were doing to themselves.

Officials again resisted, and some researchers became convinced the
government would never allow evidence of pot's possible benefits to
emerge. In 1999, Paul Consroe, a professor of pharmacology at the
University of Arizona, failed to win FDA approval for a clinical trial of
marijuana for AIDS and cancer wasting. He believes the FDA turned him down
because of political pressure. "If you want to study its harmful effects,
you can get all the money you want," says Consroe. "But for this one, I
would have spun my wheels forever." ( An FDA spokeswoman declined to
comment. )

It took Abrams five years, but he finally pushed his study through. A
stubborn and irreverent oncologist who had watched hundreds of AIDS
patients suffer brutal nausea, he won government approval in 1997 for the
first clinical trial of marijuana in more than a decade. Marijuana
proposals at the time required the approval of three agencies--the FDA, the
Drug Enforcement Administration and the National Institute on Drug
Abuse--and the DEA and NIDA had resisted. A DEA official worried in a
letter about the political fallout if Abrams found positive results. "The
government is saying there are no studies proving the medical benefits,"
Abrams fumed in 1996. "But they're also not letting studies be conducted."

Not true, says Steven Gust, special assistant to the director of NIDA, who
has worked at the agency 15 years. "Ever since I've been here, there's
been no prejudice against studying the medical applications of
marijuana. Frankly, good proposals weren't coming in. The people you've
talked to had a bad experience getting approval, and that's going to color
their perception."

Whatever the case, Abrams and Gust agree that the government and
medical-marijuana researchers are now working together. Abrams has two
approved studies under way, and the State of California has founded a new,
grander version of its old therapeutic research program. The Center for
Medicinal Cannabis Research, which opened at the University of California
two years ago with a yearly budget of $3 million, currently supports 11
studies that have received federal approval.

To be sure, many scientists--especially in the government--still squirm at
the very idea of medical-marijuana research. Despite encouraging anecdotal
reports, the National Institute of Health hasn't initiated a study of
cannabis therapeutics in two decades, leaving California's young center as
the only U.S. research institution doing the basic science.

Marijuana remains the only drug that researchers must acquire directly from
the feds. If the FDA and DEA approve, scientists can get even ecstasy from
outside labs, but NIDA is the sole source for cannabis, requiring a third
bureaucratic layer. "In an era of privatization, it's shocking that the
government insists on a monopoly so that it can choose not to provide
marijuana to projects it doesn't like," says Rick Doblin, founder of the
Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, a nonprofit
pharmaceutical firm. ( For 18 months, Doblin's association and the
University of Massachusetts Amherst have unsuccessfully sought a license to
grow research-grade cannabis at the university. )

Not every country is as pot-phobic as the U.S. Scientists in Britain,
which has effectively decriminalized personal use of small amounts of pot,
have moved well beyond the preliminary work being done in the
U.S. Britain's GW Pharmaceuticals plans to publish results of a large
study of its new marijuana product, a whole-cannabis extract rendered into
a mouth spray. That way, patients avoid the lung damage of smoking. The
British government is likely to make the spray available for prescription
if published results are as good as the company promises.

In this country, new drug products like GW's spray rarely appear without
cordial cooperation among pharmaceutical companies, research institutions
and government officials. Such partnership could take years to
develop. But the politics has leaped well ahead of the science, meaning
voters will decide long before physicians whether medical marijuana is an
oxymoron.

 

 

 

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!