Cannabis
& the Brain
Menstuff® has compiled the following information on
the impact of cannabis on the brain.
Scans show how cannabis affects
brain
Elementary
school students rushed to hospital after eating
marijuana-laced brownies
Cannabis
Legalisation in the UK: A Cost-Benefit Analysis
[INFOGRAPHIC]
Scans show how cannabis affects
brain
Compound may trigger psychosis in some heavy users,
scientists say
Brain scans showing how cannabis affects brain function
may help explain why heavy consumption of the drug triggers
psychosis and schizophrenia in a small number of people,
scientists said on Monday.
Psychiatrists are increasingly concerned about the mental
health impact of smoking large amounts of modern
super-strength marijuana, or skunk, particularly among young
people.
Until now, the mechanism by which cannabis works on the
brain has been a mystery but modern scanning techniques mean
experts can now detect its impact on brain activity.
Psychiatry said their work using magnetic resonance
imaging, or MRI, showed patients given the active cannabis
compound tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) had reduced function in
the inferior frontal cortex brain region.
This area is associated with controlling inappropriate
emotional and behavioral responses to situations.
What THC seems to be doing is switching off that
part of the brain, and that was associated with how paranoid
people became, McGuire told reporters.
Their research will be presented at a two-day
International Cannabis and Mental Health Conference at the
Institute of Psychiatry this week.
Similar findings from other teams also highlight the link
between THC dose and the risk of schizophrenia-like
symptoms, conference organizer Professor Robin Murray
said.
Its no longer a contentious issue. The expert
community, by and large, accepts that cannabis contributes
to the onset of psychotic symptoms in general and the severe
form of psychosis, schizophrenia, he said.
Double-strength joints
One reason for the growing problem is thought to be the
increasing strength of modern strains of cannabis, which are
cultivated to produce the maximum amount of THC.
In recent years, the average THC content of marijuana
sold in Britain has doubled to 12 percent from around 6
percent, while in the Netherlands it is about 18 percent,
Murray said.
Most users of cannabis still do not have a problem with
the drug but a minority, possibly because of genetic
factors, are vulnerable to long-term damage from modern
skunk -- which Murray says is to old-fashioned dope what
whisky is to lager.
The rise in THC content is linked with a decline in
another active ingredient called cannabidiol (CBD), since
the two products compete biochemically inside the cannabis
plant.
CBD, which reduces anxiety but does not produce the
euphoric high of THC, may help offset some of the paranoid
feelings.
Markus Leweke of Cologne University said a clinical trial
involving 42 patients showed CBD was as effective as the
established medicine amisulpride, sold as Solian by
Sanofi-Aventis, in treating patients with psychosis.
It seems there are good guys and bad guys within
cannabis, Leweke said.
Source: www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18397348/wid/11915773/
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