There's very little data to suggest that cannabis causes long-lasting memory problems or an increased risk of schizophrenia.
December 18, 2013
Is teen pot use really associated with long-lasting, adverse effects
on memory and an increased risk of schizophrenia? The conventional
media says so. But a closer examination of the scientific literature
reveals that it is the mainstream media, not cannabis consumers, who are
suffering from memory loss.
Marijuana Use and Cognition
Claims
that marijuana consumption causes permanent damage to the brain and
cognitive skills are hardly new. In fact, such claims have remained
pervasive since the very inception of cannabis prohibition. Yet there
exists little scientific data to support these persistent allegations.
For example, a comprehensive review published in 2003 in the
Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society
assessed effects of cannabis on neurocognitive performance in nearly a
dozen published studies, involving over 1,000 test subjects. Authors
reported: “In conclusion, our meta-analysis of studies that have
attempted to address the question of longer term neurocognitive
disturbance in moderate and heavy cannabis users has failed to
demonstrate a substantial, systematic, and detrimental effect of
cannabis use on neuropsychological performance. It was surprising to
find such few and small effects given that most of the potential biases
inherent in our analyses actually increased the likelihood of finding a
cannabis effect.”
A 2012 meta-analysis of 33 separate studies by
researchers at the University of Central Florida Department of
Psychology similarly reported that moderate to heavy marijuana consumers
failed to experience “enduring negative effects” associated with
cognition. Writing in the journal Experimental and Clinical
Psychopharmacology, investigators reported that cannabis chronic
consumption may be associated with "small" effects on neurocognitive
abilities for limited periods of time lasting beyond the immediate hours
of intoxication, but they found "no evidence of lasting effects on
cognitive performance due to cannabis use" in subjects whose abstention
period was at least 25 days. Authors concluded: "As hypothesized, the
meta-analysis conducted on studies evaluating users after at least 25
days of abstention found no residual effects on cognitive performance...
These results fail to support the idea that heavy cannabis use may
result in long-term, persistent effects on neuropsychological
functioning."
Marijuana Use and Schizophrenia
The
mainstream media has long been fixated on the allegation that smoking
pot will make you crazy. (For perspective, read my 2011 HIGH TIMES
feature, "Don’t Blame the Reefer,") So it was hardly unusual to see
mainstream news outlets this week run with headlines implying that
marijuana use may increase one’s risk of schizophrenia. Yet, scientific
research establishing such a link remains tenuous. In fact, in the days
prior to this week’s media frenzy, researchers at Harvard University
released a study soundly rebutting this allegation.
Writing in
the peer-reviewed journal Schizophrenia Research, investigators compared
the family histories of 108 schizophrenia patients and 171 individuals
without schizophrenia to assess whether youth cannabis consumption was
an independent factor in developing the disorder. Researchers reported
that a family history of schizophrenia increased the risk of developing
the disease, regardless of whether or not subjects consumed cannabis as
adolescents. They concluded: “The results of the current study, both
when analyzed using morbid risk and family frequency calculations,
suggest that having an increased familial risk for schizophrenia is the
underlying basis for schizophrenia in these samples and not the cannabis
use. While cannabis may have an effect on the age of onset of
schizophrenia it is unlikely to be the cause of illness.”
The
finding was hardly a surprise. After all, worldwide rates of
schizophrenia have largely remained stable for decades despite dramatic
changes in per capita marijuana use. In countries with marked spikes in
cannabis use, researchers have failed to report parallel increase in
incidences of schizophrenia or psychotic disorders.
Further,
studies indicate that specific cannabinoids, such as cannabidiol (CBD),
may even be efficacious in treating symptoms of the disease. According
to a review published in the November issue of the journal
Neuropsychopharmacology, “CBD has some potential as an antipsychotic
treatment. … Given the high tolerability and superior
cost-effectiveness, CBD may prove to be an attractive alternative to
current antipsychotic treatment.” More notably, a 2012 double-blind,
randomized placebo-controlled trial assessing CBD versus the
prescription anti-psychotic drug amisulpride in 42 subjects with
schizophrenia and acute paranoia concluded that two substances provided
similar levels of improvement, but that cannabidiol did so with far
fewer adverse side effects.
The Bottom Line
Societal
concerns regarding cannabis’ potential impact on the adolescent brain
and its possible association with psychiatric illnesses arguably warrant
further study. However, such concerns -- even if confirmed by sound
clinical science -- are not persuasive justifications for continuing
cannabis criminalization. Just the opposite is true. There are numerous
adverse health consequences associated with alcohol, tobacco and
prescription drugs, all of which are far more dangerous and costlier to
society than cannabis. It is precisely because of these consequences
that these products are legally regulated and their consumption is
restricted to specified consumers and settings. Further, abuse of these
substances is discouraged and science-based education campaigns
regarding these products’ potential risks are prevalent. So isn’t it
time we once and for all ended our nearly century-long love affair with
reefer madness and applied these same common sense principles to
cannabis?
It is pretty amusing isn't it? How about we focus on the ones addicted to much stronger substances?
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