home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- THREE THINGS MARIJUANA DOESN'T DO from California NORML Reports, April 1992
-
- (1) NO BRAIN DAMAGE SEEN IN MARIJUANA-EXPOSED MONKEYS
-
- Two new scientific studies have failed to find evidence
- of brain damage in monkeys exposed to marijuana, undercutting
- claims that marijuana causes brain damage in humans.
- The studies were conducted by two independent
- research groups. The first, conducted by Dr. William Slikker,
- Jr. and others at the National Center for Toxicological Research
- in Arkansas examined some 64 rhesus monkeys, half of which
- were exposed to daily or weekly doses of marijuana smoke for
- a year. The other, by Gordon T. Pryor and Charles Rebert at SRI
- International in Menlo Park, California, which is still
- unpublished, looked at over 30 rhesus monkeys that had inhaled
- marijuana one to three times a day over periods of 6 to 12
- months. Neither study found evidence of structural or
- neurochemical changes in the brains of the monkeys when
- examined a few months after cessation of smoking.
- The new results cast doubt on earlier studies
- purporting to show brain damage in animals. The most famous
- of these was a study by Dr. Robert Heath, who claimed to find
- brain damage in three monkeys heavily exposed to cannabis.
- Heath's results failed to win general acceptance in the
- scientific community because of the small number of subjects,
- questionable controls, and heavy doses.
- Subsequent rat experiments by Dr. Slikker and others
- reported persistent structural changes in the brain cells of
- rats chronically exposed to THC. The studies did not show that
- pot kills brain cells, as alleged by some pot critics, but they
- did show degeneration of the nerve connections between brain
- cells in the hippocampus, where THC is known to be active.
- Although scientists have regarded the animal evidence
- as inconclusive, some critics have cited it as proof that pot
- causes brain damage in humans. Thus Andrew Mecca, the
- director of California Department of Alcohol and Drug Abuse,
- recently stated on the Ron Reagan, Jr. talk show (Sep. 2, 1991)
- that marijuana "leaves a black protein substance in the
- synaptic cleft" of brain cells, a claim apparently based on
- Heath's monkeys. When asked by a NORML member for his
- evidence, Mecca sent a list of three references, none of which
- turned out to have anything to do with brain damage.
- Although the new monkey studies found no physical
- brain damage, they did observe behavioral changes from
- marijuana. Slikker's group found that monkeys exposed once a
- day to the human equivalent of four or five joints showed
- persistent effects throughout the day. Slikker says that the
- effects faded gradually after they were taken off marijuana,
- and were not detectable seven months later, when they were
- sacrificed. Autopsies did reveal lingering chemical changes in
- the immune cells in the lungs of monkeys that had inhaled THC.
- However, Slikker's group concluded that experimental exposure
- to marijuana smoke "does not compromise the general health of
- the rhesus monkey."
-
- References:
-
- William Slikker, Jr. et al, "Chronic Marijuana Smoke Exposure in the Rhesus
- Monkey," Fundamental and Applied Toxicology 17: 321-32 (1991)
-
- Guy Cabral et al, "Chronic Marijuana Smoke Alters Alveolar Macrophage
- Morphology and Protein Expression, Pharmacology Biochemistry and
- Behavior 40: 643-9 (1991)
-
- Merle Paule et al., "Chronic Marijuana Smoke Exposure in the Rhesus Monkey
- II: Effects on Progressive Ratio and Conditioned Position
- Responding," Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
- 260: 210-22 (1992)
-
- (2) POT FOUND NOT TO CAUSE FETAL ALCOHOL SYNDROME
-
- A new study of children born to marijuana-smoking
- mothers found no link between marijuana exposure and the
- birth defects of fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS). The new study,
- by Dr. Susan J. Astley of the University of Washington,
- published in the January, 1992 issue of Pediatrics,
- contradicted a 1982 study by Dr. Ralph Hingson, in which
- prenatal exposure to marijuana was found to increase the risk
- of FAS.
- Hingson's results, which have not been replicated, have
- been questioned on various methodological grounds, in
- particular the difficulty of controlling for combined drinking
- and pot use.
- The new study looked for facial deformities
- symptomatic of FAS in 40 children whose mothers had smoked
- marijuana heavily during pregnancy and 40 controls, It found no
- association between marijuana and FAS, but deformities were
- observed in children of women who drank 2 ounces of alcohol
- per day or took cocaine.
-
- (3) NEW STUDY FINDS POT DOESN'T LOWER TESTOSTERONE
-
- A new study by Dr. Robert Block at the University of
- Iowa disputes the commonly held notion that marijuana alters
- the level of testosterone and other sex hormones.
- The study contradicted a widely publicized 1974 study
- by Dr. R.C. Kolodony, which reported decreased testosterone
- levels in men who smoked marijuana chronically.
- The U. of Iowa study found that chronic marijuana use
- had no effect on testosterone, luteinizing hormone, follicle
- stimulating hormone, prolactin and cortisol in men or women.
- Noting that six other studies had failed to show
- lowered testosterone levels in men, Dr. Block concluded: "It
- appears that marijuana, even heavy use of the kind that's
- typical in the United States, doesn't alter testosterone levels."
- However, he cautioned that heavy use might have other
- adverse effects, including "possible effects on reproductive
- function and mild, selective cognitive impairments associated
- with heavy, chronic use."
- Block's study is published in Drug and Alcohol
- Dependence, Vol. 28: 121-8 (1991).
-