Monday, October 19, 2009

Car Wrecks Significant Health Risk of Marijuana Use

In a recent study Hall and Degenhardt said "the most common acute effects of cannabis intake are anxiety, panic reactions, and psychotic symptoms, primarily in individuals using the substance for the first time."  "Some experimental studies have shown diminished driving performance in response to emergency situations," Hall and Degenhardt said, findings also corroborated in epidemiological studies.  http://www.medpagetoday.com/Psychiatry/Addictions/16456

For example, one study of car crash victims found that they were more likely to have tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the main psychoactive component of marijuana, in their blood compared with age- and sex-matched controls.

Another study determined that motorists killed in wrecks were 2.5 times as likely to have been responsible for the accident when they had THC in their blood.

THC also increases heart rate in a dose-dependent way, perhaps increasing risks for people with preexisting cardiovascular disease.  Two studies have indicated that individuals with a history of myocardial infarction were at increased risk for second events or death when they used marijuana, the authors said.

Cognitive effects while high are, of course, well recognized, but their persistence is less clear, Hall and Degenhardt said. Some studies say cognitive impairment remains in chronic heavy users even after they quit, but others indicate that recovery of function is the rule.

Cannabis use has been linked by numerous studies with adverse psychosocial effects including poor school performance and increased likelihood of unemployment, the authors said. But causality has never been proven, they pointed out.

"Whether cannabis use is a contributory cause of poor school performance, is a consequence of poor educational attainment, or poor educational attainment is the result of common factors is unclear," they wrote.

Similar uncertainty clouds the research on whether marijuana fosters use of other, arguably more dangerous, drugs such as cocaine and heroin, the researchers said. People who use marijuana are more likely to use other illicit drugs as well, but causality has been difficult to prove.

Marijuana use has also been linked to increased risk of psychiatric disorders including schizophrenia and, less consistently, depression.

Hall and Degenhardt appeared to be persuaded that the association with schizophrenia is real, citing a series of longitudinal studies that found frequency of marijuana use was correlated with later diagnosis of schizophrenia.

This study once again shows that Cannabis/Marijuana is not a harmless herb!

8 comments:

  1. That article "proved" nothing. But even if it did, why the exclamation point? Why are you so happy that the drug is allegedly harmful? Is that exciting to you for some reason? If so, let me give you some other good news: heroin is bad! Cocaine too!

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  2. And yet, there are over 17,000 studies which continue to show that Cannabis is not only less harmful than Aspirin/Acetaminophen/Ibuprofen, but that it has numerous therapeutic benefits. . .
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?db=pubmed&cmd=Search&term=Pharmacological and therapeutic secrets of plant and brain&doptcmdl=Books

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  3. Oh. . . one more thing. . . evidence shows that thousand, if not 10s of thousands, of chronic users would have to stop in order to prevent just 1 (one) case of schizophrenia. . .

    You don't actually believe the nonsense you post here, do you? I mean, really?

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  4. Maybe you should just post the whole article so people can actually read what was said. One researcher said the correlation could be in the opposing direction. The researchers who originally conducted the study admitted the data was weak and proves nothing. If you've ever taken a psychology course in college, then you know the physically existent indicators of schizophrenia. Apparently, you haven't, as I find it highly unlikely marijuana would somehow magically cause this, when it's been mainly connected with the mother having the flu while pregnant.

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  5. You are clearly an ignorant and brainwashed individual regarding your knowledge about marijuana. Your post here contains numerous unsourced and unsubstantiated claims. Meanwhile, there are several studies which have found that even at high dosages, driving impairment due to marijuana is less than what society deems acceptable for alcohol - a BAC of 0.08%

    I'll let the US Department of Transportation's words make this more clear for you ...

    "The maximum road tracking impairment after the highest THC dose (300 ug/kg) was within a range of effects produced by many commonly used medicinal drugs and less than that associated with a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of 0.08g% in previous studies employing the same test. "

    Here is the link to their study:

    http://www.druglibrary.org/schaffer/misc/driving/dot78_1.htm

    There is also a comprehensive Dutch study which found similar results.

    Your blog is serving a very useful purpose though, it is dredging up all of the inane anti-marijuana myths so they can be shot down.

    BRAVO!

    BTW - PLEASE ... do a post about emergency room admissions. I know you don't want to believe this, but ...

    It turns out that there is a dose-dependent NEGATIVE CORRELATION between marijuana consumption and emergency room admissions - for all causes including traffic accidents. That's right. Stoned people end up in the ER less often than straight people, and REALLY stoned people even LESS often. Hmmm.

    http://www.nowpublic.com/health/cannabis-use-lowers-injury-risk-two-thirds-swiss-study-shows

    http://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/ebm/record/16703715/abstract/Marijuana_and_other_illicit_drug_use_and_the_risk_of_injury:_A_case_control_study_

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  6. Oh, and BTW-II ...

    I LOVE the misspelling in your title block. Not gonna tell ya' which word though as it generally helps to discredit you and make you look like the fool you are.

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  7. Here is a nifty phrase that might help in your eventual disillusionment:

    correlation is not causation
    say it with me now,
    "CORRELATION IS NOT CAUSATION!"

    Learn it and love it.

    What you subscribe to when formulating your brilliance may be seen as foolish ignorance with a dash of self-loathing... you might wanna get that looked at.

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