Guest guest Posted August 1, 2007 Report Share Posted August 1, 2007 1 joint equals up to 5 cigarettes By RAY LILLEY, Associated Press Writer Tue Jul 31, 11:00 PM ET WELLINGTON, New Zealand - A single joint of marijuana obstructs the flow of air as much as smoking up to five tobacco cigarettes, but long-term pot use does not increase the risk of developing emphysema, new research suggests. The study by New Zealand's Medical Research Institute found that longtime pot smokers can develop symptoms of asthma and bronchitis, along with obstruction of the large airways and excessive lung inflation. The paper was released Tuesday ahead of its publication in the journal Thorax. " The study shows that one cannabis joint causes a similar degree of lung damage as between 2.5 and five tobacco cigarettes, " said lead author Sarah Aldington. However, the researchers found that the progressive chronic lung disease emphysema, often associated with cigarette smoking, was uncommon among marijuana smokers. Only 1.3 percent of the long-term pot smokers were found to have signs of the disease compared to 16.3 percent of those who combined marijuana and tobacco, and 18.9 percent of those who only smoked tobacco. Marijuana smokers had symptoms that included wheezing, coughing, chest tightness and phlegm — all of which were associated with tobacco smokers, except chest tightness. The study, which used lung function tests, high-resolution X-rays and questionnaires, also revealed that among marijuana smokers damage occurred to the small, fine airways which are important for taking in oxygen and removing waste gases. The extent of damage rose in proportion to the number of joints smoked. Last week, another study published in The Lancet medical journal suggested that using marijuana may increase the likelihood of becoming psychotic, with even infrequent use potentially raising the overall small risk by up to 40 percent. The three-year Thorax study involved 339 people in New Zealand, where pot smoking is fairly common. An estimated 160 million people use marijuana worldwide. Participants were recruited into four groups based on smoking habits — nonsmokers, tobacco-only smokers, tobacco and marijuana smokers, and marijuana-only smokers. To qualify as a long-term marijuana user, participants had to have smoked a minimum of one joint a day for five years, said institute director Richard Beasley, who also participated in the study. Tobacco users had to have smoked a pack a day for one year. Earlier studies have shown that smoking one joint results in three to five times more carbon monoxide and tar inhaled than smoking a cigarette of the same size. The New Zealand research also showed that the " products of combustion " in marijuana are very similar to tobacco, Beasley said. Part of the reason for this is the way joints are smoked, with users often inhaling and holding the smoke in longer for a better hit. Marijuana joints typically do not have filters and they have shorter butts than cigarettes with a higher smoke temperature. Pot also is commonly smoked through various types of pipes. Jeff Garrett, president of the Australia-New Zealand Thoracic Society, who was not involved in the study, said that although researchers found emphysema among marijuana smokers relatively rare, he emphasized that it does occur. Hospital specialists also are seeing an increasing number of people with emphysema specifically related to marijuana smoking, he said. ____ Associated Press Medical Writer Margie Mason contributed to this report from Hanoi, Vietnam. http://news./s/ap/20070801/ap_on_he_me/pot_vs_cigarettes;_ylt=Andy7PYx0\ cvYUQgwkJPaUZER.3QA --------------- Source: Cardiff University August 1, 2007 Cannabis Could Increase Risks Of Psychotic Illness By 40 Percent Science Daily — Cannabis could increase risk of psychotic illness later in life by 40 per cent. There is now enough evidence to warn young people that using cannabis could increase their risk of developing a psychotic illness later in life, a collaborative Cardiff University study has found. Cannabis, or marijuana, is the most commonly used illegal substance in most countries, including the UK and USA. In studies over the last decade up to 20 per cent of young people (aged 14-21) in different parts of the world have used cannabis regularly (at least once per week) or used heavily (on more than 100 occasions in total). Dr Stanley Zammit in the School of Medicine’s Department of Psychological Medicine and colleagues at the Universities of Bristol, Cambridge and Imperial College, London analysed 35 studies dated up to the end of 2006. The researchers assessed the strength of evidence for a causal relationship between cannabis use and the occurrence of psychotic or other mental health disorders. The study, funded by the Department of Health, found that individuals who had used cannabis were 41 per cent more likely than those who had never used the drug to have any psychosis (presence of delusions or hallucinations). The risk increased relative to dose, with the most frequent cannabis users more than twice as likely to have a psychotic outcome. Depression, suicidal thoughts, and anxiety outcomes were examined separately, and findings for these outcomes were less consistent, with fewer attempts made to address non-causal explanations than for psychosis. Dr Zammit, School of Medicine said: “The studies we looked at showed a consistent association between cannabis use and psychotic symptoms, including disabling psychotic disorders such as schizophrenia.” “Despite the inevitable uncertainty, policymakers need to provide the public with advice about this widely used drug. We believe that there is now enough evidence to inform people that using cannabis could increase their risk of developing a psychotic illness later in life.” If having ever used cannabis increases the risk of a psychotic outcome by 41 per cent as indicated by the results of the study, about 14 per cent of psychotic outcomes in young adults in the UK would not occur if cannabis were not consumed. Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by Cardiff University. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/07/070731125526.htm --------------- Source: University of California - San Francisco May 16, 2007 More on: Marijuana, Controlled Substances, Illegal Drugs, Today's Healthcare, Addiction, Teen Health Marijuana Vaporizer Provides Same Level Of THC, Fewer Toxins, Study Shows Science Daily — A smokeless cannabis-vaporizing device delivers the same level of active therapeutic chemical and produces the same biological effect as smoking cannabis, but without the harmful toxins, according to University of California San Francisco researchers. Results of a UCSF study, which focuses on delivery of the active ingredient delta-9-tertrahydrocannibinol, or THC, are reported in the online issue of the journal " Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics. " " We showed in a recent paper in the journal 'Neurology' that smoked cannabis can alleviate the chronic pain caused by HIV-related neuropathy, but a concern was expressed that smoking cannabis was not safe. This study demonstrates an alternative method that gives patients the same effects and allows controlled dosing but without inhalation of the toxic products in smoke, " said study lead author Donald I. Abrams, MD, UCSF professor of clinical medicine. The research team looked at the effectiveness of a device that heats cannabis to a temperature between 180 and 200 degrees C, just short of combustion, which occurs at 230 degrees C. Eighteen individuals were enrolled as inpatients for six days under supervision in the General Clinical Research Center at San Francisco General Hospital Medical Center. Under the study protocol, the participants received on different days three different strengths of cannabis by two delivery methods--smoking or vaporization--three times a day. Plasma concentrations of THC were measured along with the exhaled levels of carbon monoxide, or CO. A toxic gas, CO served as a marker for the many other combustion-generated toxins inhaled when smoking. The plasma concentrations of THC were comparable at all strengths of cannabis between smoking and vaporization. Smoking increased CO levels as expected, but there was little or no increase in CO levels after inhaling from the vaporizer, according to Abrams. " Using CO as an indicator, there was virtually no exposure to harmful combustion products using the vaporizing device. Since it replicates smoking's efficiency at producing the desired THC effect using smaller amounts of the active ingredient as opposed to pill forms, this device has great potential for improving the therapeutic utility of THC, " said study co-author Neal L. Benowitz, MD, UCSF professor of medicine, psychiatry and biopharmaceutical sciences. He added that pills tend to provide patients with more THC than they need for optimal therapeutic effect and increase side effects. Patients rated the " high " they experienced from both smoking and vaporization and there was no difference between the two methods by patient self-report of the effect, according to study findings. In addition, patients were asked which method they preferred. " By a significant majority, patients preferred vaporization to smoking, choosing the route of delivery with the fewest side effects and greatest efficiency, " said Benowitz. Co-authors include Cheryl A. Jay, MD, UCSF neurology; and Starley B. Shade, MPH; Hector Vizoso, RN; and Mary Ellen Kelly, MPH, UCSF Positive Health Program at San Francisco General Hospital Medical Center. The study was funded by the University of California's Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research. Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by University of California - San Francisco. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/05/070515151145.htm --------- Research Institute Adds Nothing To Knowledge Wednesday, 1 August 2007, 12:06 pm Press Release: Blair Anderson The New Zealand Medical Research Institute adds nothing to our collective medical knowledge in its Cannabis/Lung research on 300 plus kiwis, writes Christchurch public health advocate and Mayoral candidate, Blair Anderson. Nor is this research finding remotely relevant when used to justify punitive cannabis laws in any jurisdiction centred around tobacco's largely successful 'education' based public health response. Helena Shovelton, Chief Executive of the British Lung Foundation throws us a straw man. " Smoking a joint is more harmful to the lungs than smoking a cigarette and we have just banned people from doing that in public places because of the health risks. " When Shovelton says " The danger cannabis poses to respiratory health is consistently being overlooked " , global tobacco uptake these past 20 years has, as a DIRECT consequence, placed a health burden that will result in ONE BILLION DEATHS by 2021. Cannabis on the other hand, if history and epidemiological data well known to science is to be taken into account will account for ZERO. Anderson, who has a long time interest in public advocacy for better air notes that New Zealand's latest Air quality data (Gavin Fisher, Endpoint Research ) suggests 1100 deaths per year, and a Billion dollars every year in 'losses' consequence to that respiratory burden, noting that in this matter the public has no choice. Anderson asked the question at the 2002 " Road to Cleaner Air " Conference [Wellington] as to what research funding do we allocate in this area, Professor Alistair Woodward [then] of the Department of Public Health, Wellington School of Medicine, University of Otago replied 'none'. When pressed to indicate a best guess how many kiwi's die from mobile source diesel emissions Woodward said, 'about twice the national road toll', there was an audible gasp from the 400+ delegates present. Anderson says none of this is new, public health centred about what we can choose to do versus what we have imposed on us is a constant challenge, recalling the scientific spat over anti-smoking and pollution advertisements that promulgate lies or half-truths, 'which statisticians declared were acceptable' and explored by the Press Council [see note 2]. " The question is, when it comes to drugs... why does everyone run for cover? " Which part of 'consistent' public policy is being overlooked? And why is medical science so determined to prove the inconsequential, when the odds are a billion to nothing! http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PO0708/S00014.htm -------------------- TODAY'S EDITORIAL: Rehashing the Evidence 31 Jul 2007, 0237 hrs IST It's difficult for anyone to eat crow, let alone a prestigious medical publication like The Lancet. Back in 1995 the journal had pronounced — almost ex cathedra — that marijuana was safe. " The smoking of cannabis, even long-term, is not harmful to health " , the editors had asserted in what subsequently turned out to be much quoted words by proponents of the weed. In its latest issue, however, they've taken it all back. Now they're saying that in the light of new research findings, governments would do well to invest in sustained and effective education campaigns on the risks to health of taking cannabis. So, why the abrupt turnaround? Well, according to an analysis of published studies conducted by British researchers, people who have ever used marijuana in any form — grass, hash or mixed with sweet drinks — risk boosting their chances of developing a psychotic illness later in life by about 40 per cent. That's not all. Those who use the drug on a regular basis can increase that risk factor by 50 to 200 per cent. The study, which was published in The Lancet, estimates that 14 per cent of 15 to 34-year-olds currently suffering from schizophrenia in England are ill because they smoked cannabis. Supporters of the substance, like the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws in the US who advocate its decriminalisation, have of course criticised the study. They say if an association exists between marijuana use and psychotic illness there should have been an explosion in schizophrenic cases also, especially since there's been an explosion in marijuana usage among adults and young people in most western cultures. And, in order not to throw the baby out with the bathwater, the proven medical uses of marijuana in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease, multiple sclerosis and hypertension, for instance, should not be disregarded. Nevertheless, the study as such cannot be easily dismissed or refuted. India's laws have banned cultivation, possession and use of cannabis since 1985. The latest findings are a setback for those who argue that the ban should be reviewed. Authorities therefore would indeed do well now to create a sustained awareness among recreational users of marijuana of the potential dangers involved. Public health warnings too should be used to advise teenagers who take to smoking joints under the misapprehension that it's safer than, say, tobacco or alcohol. And since bhang is a form of cannabis, the warnings ought to extend to consumption of bhang, especially during Holi, when it is quite an accepted ritual. url ------- Medical Marijuana POSTED: 11:10 am EDT July 17, 2007 BACKGROUND: Estimates are that about 300,000 people in the United States use medical marijuana. In April 2007, New Mexico became the 12th state to allow it -- joining Washington, Oregon, California, Alaska, Maine, Nevada, Vermont, Colorado, Montana, Hawaii and Rhode Island. By federal law, however, the substance is illegal. PRO: Advocates of the drug argue it is an effective pain reliever that can work when other drugs don't. It's used by patients with a variety of ailments, including cancer, glaucoma, HIV or AIDS, multiple sclerosis and hepatitis C. Donald Abrams, M.D., the Chief of Hematology Oncology at San Francisco General Hospital and a longtime HIV researcher, says, " Marijuana has been a drug or used as a medicine for 5,000 years. It's only a short period of time that it hasn't been viewed as a medicine. " He adds, " Yes, we have many more potent drugs, many more modern drugs that work for more people. But in somebody for whom those drugs don't work, if inhaling cannabis works to allow them to tolerate their chemotherapy, then that's important. No other drug that works against nausea also decreases pain. " He adds it's safe, saying, " When we talk about the side effects of marijuana compared to many prescription drugs that doctors prescribe on a daily basis, it's really quite safe. The number of patients I admit to this hospital who have complications of alcohol, tobacco, heroin, cocaine, speed, even sugar, far surpasses the number of patients that I've ever admitted or ever seen where I attribute the damage to marijuana. " In response to the allegation that marijuana can cause lung cancer, Dr. Abrams says a recent study shows it may actually prevent it. A PATIENT' STORY: Brian Klein is in his late 40s and was diagnosed with both HIV and hepatitis C in 1996. His treatment for hepatitis C caused fatigue, nausea and brain fog. He tried medications to curb the nausea but was allergic to them. Others made him so sleepy he couldn't function. He then tried the FDA-approved pill version form of marijuana called Marinol but got the head buzz from it without the nausea relief. Finally, he opted to try smoking medical cannabis. Relief came within 60 seconds. Brian says, " Within a few minutes I could go eat, whereas before using it, I couldn't even keep down water. So this made a dramatic difference in my life, in my ability to be able to stay on the treatments so that I could get through it and have a successful result. " He is now free of the hepatitis C virus. CON: The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's position on medical marijuana, as stated on its Web site, is: " Smoked marijuana has not withstood the rigors of science -- it is not medicine and it is not safe. " The DEA goes on: " The FDA noted that 'there is currently sound evidence that smoked marijuana is harmful,' and 'that no sound scientific studies supported medical use of marijuana for treatment in the United States, and no animal or human data supported the safety or efficacy of marijuana for general medical use.' " Other DEA points include: •Marijuana use has been linked with depression, suicidal thoughts and schizophrenia •Marijuana takes the risks of tobacco and raises them: marijuana smoke contains more than 400 chemicals and increases the risk of serious health consequences, including lung damage •Marijuana use narrows arteries in the brain, similar to patients with high blood pressure and dementia, and may explain why memory tests are difficult for marijuana users •Chronic consumers of cannabis can have blood flow problems in the brain, which can cause memory loss, attention deficits, and impaired learning ability •The British Medical Association maintains marijuana " has been linked to greater risk of heart disease, lung cancer, bronchitis and emphysema " Copyright 2007 by wftv.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. http://www.wftv.com/health/13696141/detail.html --------------- New Studies: Medical Marijuana Laws Don't Increase Use Tuesday, July 03 2007 @ 11:54 PM EDT Edited by: Michael Hess Weak Marijuana Works as Well as High-Dose THC Pills BBSNews 2007-07-03 -- (MPP) WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Two just-published scientific studies provide further evidence that medical marijuana laws do not increase marijuana use, and that even weak marijuana works as well as (and in some ways better than) high-dose Marinol, the THC pill sometimes touted as a substitute for marijuana. In a study published online by the International Journal of Drug Policy, researchers from the Texas A & M Health/Science Center analyzed two sets of data designed to monitor emerging drug-use trends, the Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring System (ADAM) and the Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN), from locations where medical marijuana laws have been put into effect. ADAM is based on urine tests of adult and juvenile arrestees, while DAWN tracks mentions of drug use in records of hospital emergency departments. Both sets of data, from before and after implementation of the medical marijuana laws, were looked at in a " time-series analysis " based on the premise that " if the law in question has an impact (either positive or negative) then the series of observations that follow its implementation will have a different slope or trend than those that occurred before. " In both sets of data -- from California, Colorado, Oregon, and Washington -- the researchers found no change in the trend after medical marijuana laws went into effect. " Consistent with other studies of the liberalization of cannabis laws, " they wrote, " [the results] indicate that medical cannabis laws do not increase use of the drug. " A second study, in the Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes and also published online ahead of its appearance in print, compared the THC pill marketed as Marinol to smoked marijuana supplied by the National Institute on Drug Abuse. While both medications proved effective at stimulating appetite, reducing the need for other medications to combat gastrointestinal problems, and helping patients sleep, it took eight times the recommended dose of Marinol to roughly equal the efficacy of weak marijuana, with 3.9 percent THC, supplied by NIDA. According to the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, the average THC content of marijuana seized by law enforcement during the first quarter of 2007 was 8.5 percent. The study's " double-dummy " design successfully prevented patients from identifying which active treatment they were receiving at any given time, overcoming a common problem with marijuana and THC studies. Although researchers characterized the efficacy of Marinol and whole marijuana in the study as " similar, " only whole marijuana produced statistically significant improvements in patients' levels of hunger, desire to eat, and quality of sleep. Marijuana also produced a higher daily caloric intake than even the highest Marinol dose, although in this small and relatively brief study, that difference did not reach statistical significance. Neither treatment produced significant negative side effects. Strikingly, when patients were given a series of tests measuring learning, memory and other cognitive functions, neither marijuana nor oral THC produced any significant changes in performance. Gorman DM and Huber J Charles Jr. Do Medical Cannabis Laws Encourage Cannabis Use? International Journal of Drug Policy, 2007 Vol. 18 no. 3, pp. 160-7. Haney M, Gunderson EW, Rabkin J, Hart CL, Vosburg SK, Comer SD, and Foltin RW. Dronabinol and Marijuana in HIV-Positive Marijuana Smokers: Caloric Intake, Mood, and Sleep. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2007 Jun 21; [Epub ahead of print] http://bbsnews.net/article.php/20070703235428924 -------------------- How Risky Is it to Smoke Pot? One Expert's Take By Katherine Hobson Posted 7/30/07 Marijuana has long had the reputation of being a relatively harmless drug. Two recent studies, however, highlight its potential dangers: One suggests that using marijuana increases the odds of eventually developing a psychotic disorder, while the other found that smoking one marijuana joint affected the lungs as much as smoking five cigarettes. We spoke with Marc Kaufman, director of the Translational Imaging Laboratory at McLean Hospital, a Harvard-affiliated psychiatric hospital, and an associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard, to get some perspective on pot. He studies the effects of drugs on the brain and other bodily systems. Is it biologically plausible that marijuana could mess with your head? Sure. There are receptors for cannabinoids [the active compound in marijuana] in the brain that send signals and modify other systems, such as the dopamine and glutamate systems. Changing the neurochemistry of the brain may alter those systems–it's very hard to predict. They all interact with each other. The study on psychosis showed that smoking marijuana raised the risk–which is quite low–by 40 percent. Does this mean that smoking marijuana causes schizophrenia or other psychotic disorders? No. It shows that people are more likely to get those symptoms if they use marijuana, but it might be that the marijuana is unmasking something that's already there. It's very hard to say there's a definitive cause and effect. You say the study about lung function has much broader implications for public health. If marijuana can unmask a predisposition for psychosis, only a small number of people might experience this unmasking. But the lung findings are very interesting, apart from what they mean for lung health [the study found that smoking cannabis is associated with impeded airflow]. Other research has shown that in people who aren't necessarily drug abusers, poor lung function is related to poor cognitive function. That would affect more people. What about the medical benefits of marijuana? There's clearly a debate in society about whether people should be able to use these drugs [in a medical setting] to counteract the nausea associated with cancer treatment. But what we can tell from the lung study is that while there may be some beneficial effects, marijuana may have some downstream effects on the brain. What many researchers are trying to do is to come up with drugs that are selective–they'll bring the same benefit, such as combating nausea, but won't produce a high or damage the lungs. I was always taught that marijuana wasn't physically addictive. True? There's been a controversy over the years, but we're seeing that there really is a withdrawal or a dependence syndrome. People who have smoked a lot of marijuana tend to experience increased cravings, sleep problems, increased aggressiveness, and restlessness when they try to quit. The symptoms can last 10 days, so it can be really hard to quit. People are beginning to accept that there's this dependence system, and there's an appreciation that we have to consider marijuana abuse treatment. We need to come up with some medications that can treat dependence. http://health.usnews.com/usnews/health/articles/070730/30pot.htm ------------ Need a vacation? Get great deals to amazing places on Travel. 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