138 lines
8.2 KiB
Plaintext
138 lines
8.2 KiB
Plaintext
HARVARD MEDICAL REPORT ON MARIJUANA
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--excerpted from the Harvard Medical School Mental
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Health Letter, November 1987
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Although still illegal, marijuana has become a commonplace
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part of the American social scene, used regularly by millions and
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occasionally by millions more. A realistic view of this drug is now
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more important and easier to achieve.
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The use of marijuana reached a high point in the late 1970's
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and early 1980's, and has been declining ever since. In a 1978
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survey, 37% of high school seniors said they had smoked marijuana
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in the last 30 days, and 11% said they used it daily. By 1986 the
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number who said they had smoked it in the last 30 days had fallen
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to 23%--lower than in 1975--and the proportion of daily users had
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dropped steadily to 4%. The trend among people\ aged 18 to 25 is
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similar. More people over 25 may now be using it occasionally, and
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young people are still experimenting with it.
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The main active ingredient of cannabis is delta-9-
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tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). one of more than 60 related chemicals
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found in the resin that covers the flowers and top leaves of the
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cannabis (hemp) plant. Leaves and flowers can be ground up in
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drinks or food, but are more often dried and smoked in a cigarette
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or pipe. The pure resin, known as hashish, can also be smoked,
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eaten or drunk. New breeding and cultivation techniques have raised
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the THC content of marijuana smoked in the United States as much as
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10 times over the last 20 years, from an average of 0.4% to 4%.
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EFFECTS: The effects last two to four hours when marijuana is
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smoked, and five to 12 hours when taken by mouth. Although
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intoxication varies with psychological set and social setting, the
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most common response is a calm, mildly euphoric state in which time
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slows and sensitivity to sights, sounds and touch is enhanced.
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The smoker may feel exhilaration or hilarity and notice a
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rapid flow of ideas with a reduction in short-term memory. Images
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sometimes appear before closed eyes;visual perception and body
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image may undergo subtle changes. It is dangerous to operate
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complex machinery, including automobiles, under the influence of
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marijuana.
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The main physiological effects of cannabis are increased
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appetite a faster heartbeat, and sightly bloodshot eyes.
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NEGATIVE REACTIONS: Although the increased heart rate could be
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a problem for people with cardiovascular disease, dangerous
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physical reactions to marijuana are almost unknown.
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No human being is known to have died of an overdose. Like many
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other drugs, cannabis produces a toxic delirium when taken at very
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high doses, especially by mouth. The symptoms are confusion,
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agitation, disorientation, loss of coordination, and often
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hallucination; the delirium ends when the drug passes out of the
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body. The most common disturbing reaction to marijuana is acute
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anxiety, sometimes accompanied by paranoid thoughts, which may lead
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to panic. The most likely victim of this reaction is an
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inexperienced user inadvertently taking a high dose in an
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unpleasant or unfamiliar setting. The best way to handle the
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anxiety and paranoia is calming support and reassurance.
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Cannabis is less potent than hallucinogenic or psychedelic
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drugs and the user is better able to control its effects.
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LONG TERM EFFECTS: In recent years the psychological and
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physical effects of long-term use have caused the most concern.
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Studies are often conflicting and permit various views of
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marijuana's possible harmfulness.
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Two recognized signs of addiction are tolerance and withdrawal
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symptoms. These are rarely a serious problem for marijuana users:
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almost no one reports an urgent need to increase the dose to
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recapture the original sensation, and there is little evidence that
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withdrawal ordinarily presents serious problems to users, or causes
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them to go on taking the drug.
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People suffering from drug dependence find that they are
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constantly thinking about the drug, or intoxicated, or recovering
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from its effects. The habit impairs their mental and physical
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health and hurts their work, family life, and friendships. They
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often know that they are using too much and repeatedly make
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unsuccessful attempts to cut down or stop. Those problems seem to
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occur in proportionately fewer marijuana smokers than users of
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alcohol, tobacco, heroin or cocaine.
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Most people who develop marijuana dependency would be would be
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likely to develop other dependencies because of anxiety, depression
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or feelings of inadequacy. The troubled teen who smokes cannabis
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throughout the school day certainly has a problem, and excessive
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use may be one symptom.
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BEHAVIORAL EFFECTS: Experiments in the U.S. show no effects of
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fairly heavy marijuana use on learning, perception or motivation
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over periods as long as a year.
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In three major studies, conducted in Jamaica, Costa Rica and
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Greece, researchers compared heavy long-term cannabis users with
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non-users and found no evidence of intellectual or neurological
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damage, no changes in personality, and no loss of the will to work
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or to participate in society.
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Much attention has also been devoted to the idea that
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marijuana smoking leads to use of other illicit drugs: the
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"stepping stone" hypothesis. There is no convincing evidence for or
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against this. What is clear is that at many times and places
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marijuana has been used without these drugs, or these drugs have
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been used without marijuana.
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REPRODUCTION: Most recent studies on the health hazards of
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marijuana concerns its long-term effects on the body. Studies have
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examined the brain, the immune system, the reproductive system, and
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the lungs. Suggestions of long-term damage come almost exclusively
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from animal experiments and other laboratory work. Observations of
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marijuana users and the Caribbean, Greek and other studies reveal
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little disease or organic pathology associated with the drug. If
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there were significant damage, we might expect to find a higher
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rate of these diseases among young people beginning in the 1960's,
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when marijuana first became popular. There is no evidence of that.
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The effects of marijuana on the reproductive system are a more
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complicated issue. In men, a single dose of THC lowers sperm count
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and the level of testosterone and other hormones. Tolerance to this
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effect apparently develops; in the Costa Rican study, marijuana
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smokers and controls had the same testosterone levels. There is no
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evidence that the changes in sperm count and testosterone affect
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sexual performance or fertility.
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In animal experiments, THC has been reported to lower levels
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of female hormones and disturb the menstrual cycle. When monkeys,
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rats and mice have been exposed during pregnancy to amounts of THC
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equivalent to a heavy smoking human's dose, stillbirths and
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decreased birth weight are sometimes reported in their offspring.
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There are also reports of low birth weight, prematurity and even a
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condition resembling the fetal alcohol syndrome in some children of
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women who smoke marijuana heavily during pregnancy.
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The significance of these reports is unclear because controls
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are lacking and other circumstances make is hard to attribute
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causes. To be safe, pregnant and nursing women should follow the
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standard conservative recommendation to avoid all drugs, including
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cannabis, that are not absolutely necessary.
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LUNGS: A well-confirmed danger of long-term heavy marijuana
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use is its effects on the lungs. Smoking narrows and inflames air
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passages and reduces breathing capacity; damage to bronchial cells
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has been observed in hashish smokers. Possible harmful effects
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include bronchitis, emphysema and lung cancer. Marijuana smoke
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contains the same carcinogens as tobacco smoke, usually in somewhat
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higher concentrations, and is inhaled more deeply and held in the
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lungs longer, which increases the danger. On the other hand, almost
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no one smokes 20 marijuana cigarettes a day.
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Higher THC content in cannabis may reduce the danger of
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respiratory damage, because less smoke is required for the desired
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effect. This is only true as long as no significant tolerance
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develops and users do not try to get proportionately more intense
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effect from a stronger form of the drug.
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END
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