Cannabis and the Brain: A User's Guide
by
Paul Armentano
by Paul Armentano
Preclinical
data recently published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation
demonstrating that cannabinoids may spur brain cell growth has reignited
the international debate regarding the impact of marijuana on the
brain. However, unlike previous pseudo-scientific campaigns that
attempted to link pot smoking with a litany of cognitive abnormalities,
modern research suggests what many cannabis enthusiasts have speculated
all along: ganja may be good for you.
Cannabinoids
& Neurogenesis
"Study turns
pot wisdom on its head," pronounced the Globe and Mail in
October. News wires throughout North America and the world touted
similar headlines – all of which were met with a monumental silence
from federal officials and law enforcement. Why all the fuss? Researchers
at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon found that the administration
of synthetic cannabinoids in rats stimulated the proliferation of
newborn neurons (nerve cells) in the hippocampus region of the brain
and significantly reduced measures of anxiety and depression-like
behavior. The results shocked researchers – who noted that almost
all other so-called "drugs of abuse," including alcohol and tobacco,
decrease neurogenesis in adults – and left the "pot kills brain
cells" crowd with a platter of long-overdue egg on their faces.
While it would
be premature to extrapolate the study's findings to humans, at a
minimum, the data reinforce the notion that cannabinoids are unusually
non-toxic to the brain and that even long-term use of marijuana
likely represents little risk to brain function. The findings also
offer further evidence that cannabinoids can play a role in the
alleviation of depression and anxiety, and that cannabis-based medicines
may one day offer a safer alternative to conventional anti-depressant
pharmaceuticals such as Paxil and Prozac.
(Reference:
Cannabinoids promote embryonic and adult hippocampus neurogenesis
and produce anxiolytic and depressant-like effects. The Journal
of Clinical Investigation. 2005)
Cannabis
& Neuroprotection
Not only has
modern science refuted the notion that marijuana is neurotoxic,
recent scientific discoveries have indicated that cannabinoids are,
in fact, neuroprotective, particularly against alcohol-induced brain
damage. In a recent preclinical study – the irony of which is obvious
to anyone who reads it – researchers at the US National Institutes
of Mental Health (NIMH) reported that the administration of the
non-psychoactive cannabinoid cannabidiol (CBD) reduced ethanol-induced
cell death in the brain by up to 60 percent. "This study provides
the first demonstration of CBD as an in vivo neuroprotectant ...
in preventing binge ethanol-induced brain injury," the study's authors
wrote in the May 2005 issue of the Journal of Pharmacology and
Experimental Therapeutics. Alcohol poisoning is linked to hundreds
of preventable deaths each year in the United States, according
to the Centers for Disease Control, while cannabis cannot cause
death by overdose.
Of course,
many US neurologists have known about cannabis' neuroprotective
prowess for years. NIMH scientists in 1998 first touted the ability
of natural cannabinoids to stave off the brain-damaging effects
of stroke and acute head trauma. Similar findings were then replicated
by investigators in the Netherlands and Italy and, most recently,
by a Japanese research in 2005. However, attempts to measure the
potential neuroprotective effects of synthetic cannabinoid-derived
medications in humans have so far been inconclusive.
(References:
Comparison of cannabidiol, antioxidants and diuretics in reversing
binge ethanol-induced neurotoxicity. Journal of Pharmacology
and Experimental Therapeutics. 2005 | Cannabidiol prevents cerebral
infarction. Stroke. 2005 | Post-ischemic treatment with cannabidiol
prevents electroencephalographic flattening, hyperlocomotion and
neuronal injury in gerbils. Neuroscience Letters. 2003 |
Neuroprotection by Delta9-tetrahydrocannabinol, the main active
compound in marijuana, against ouabain-induced in vivo excitotoxicity.
Journal of Neuroscience. 2001 | Cannabidiol and Delta9-tetrahydrocannabinol
are neuroprotective antioxidants. Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences. 1998)
Cannabinoids
and Glioma
Of all cancers,
few are as aggressive and deadly as glioma. Glioma tumors quickly
invade healthy brain tissue and are typically unresponsive to surgery
and standard medical treatments. One agent they do respond to is
cannabis.
Writing in
the August 2005 issue of the Journal of Neurooncology, investigators
at the California Pacific Medical Center Research Institute reported
that the administration of THC on human glioblastoma multiforme
cell lines decreased the proliferation of malignant cells and induced
apoptosis (programmed cell death) more rapidly than did the administration
of the synthetic cannabis receptor agonist, WIN-55,212-2. Researchers
also noted that THC selectively targeted malignant cells while ignoring
healthy ones in a more profound manner than the synthetic alternative.
Patients diagnosed with glioblastoma multiforme typically die within
three months without therapy.
Previous research
conducted in Italy has also demonstrated the capacity of CBD to
inhibit the growth of glioma cells both in vitro (e.g., a petri
dish) and in animals in a dose dependent manner. As a result, a
Spanish research team is currently investigating whether the intracranial
administration of cannabinoids can prolong the lives of patients
diagnosed with inoperable brain cancer.
Most recently,
a scientific analysis in the October issue of the journal Mini-Reviews
in Medicinal Chemistry noted that, in addition to THC and CBD's
brain cancer-fighting ability, studies have also shown cannabinoids
to halt the progression of lung carcinoma, leukemia, skin carcinoma,
colectoral cancer, prostate cancer and breast cancer.
(References:
Cannabinoids selectively inhibit proliferation and induce cell death
of cultured human glioblastoma multiforme cells. Journal of Neurooncology.
2005 | Cannabinoids and cancer. Mini-Reviews in Medicinal Chemistry.
2005 | Anti-tumor effects of cannabidiol, a non-psychotropic cannabinoid,
on human glioma cell lines. Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental
Therapeutics. 2003)
Cannabinoids
& Neurodegeneration
Emerging evidence
also indicates that cannabinoids may play a role in slowing the
progression of certain neurodegenerative diseases, such as Multiple
Sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's, and Amyotrophic Lateral
Sclerosis (a.k.a. Lou Gehrig's Disease). Recent animal studies have
shown cannabinoids to delay disease progression and inhibit neurodegeneration
in mouse models of ALS, Parkinson's, and MS. As a result, the Journal
of Neurological Sciences recently pronounced, "There is accumulating
evidence ... to support the hypothesis that the cannabinoid system
can limit the neurodegenerative processes that drive progressive
disease," and patient trials investigating whether the use of oral
THC and cannabis extracts may slow the progression of MS are now
underway in the United Kingdom.
(References:
Cannabinoids and neuroprotection in CNS inflammatory disease. Journal
of the Neurological Sciences. 2005. Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis:
delayed disease progression in mice by treatment with a cannabinoid.
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis and Other Motor Neuron Disorders.
2004 |Cannabinoids inhibit neurodegeneration in models of multiple
sclerosis. Brain. 2003)
Cannabis
& Cognition
But what about
claims of cannabis' damaging effect of cognition? A review of the
scientific literature indicates that rumors regarding the "stoner
stupid" stereotype are unfounded. According to clinical trial data
published this past spring in the American Journal of Addictions,
cannabis use – including heavy, long-term use of the drug – has,
at most, only a negligible impact on cognition and memory. Researchers
at Harvard Medical School performed magnetic resonance imaging on
the brains of 22 long-term cannabis users (reporting a mean of 20,100
lifetime episodes of smoking) and 26 controls (subjects with no
history of cannabis use). Imaging displayed "no significant differences"
between heavy cannabis smokers compared to controls, the study found.
Previous trials
tell a similar tale. An October 2004 study published in the journal
Psychological Medicine examining the potential long-term
residual effects of cannabis on cognition in monozygotic male twins
reported "an absence of marked long-term residual effects of marijuana
use on cognitive abilities." A 2003 meta-analysis published in the
Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society also
"failed to reveal a substantial, systematic effect of long-term,
regular cannabis consumption on the neurocognitive functioning of
users who were not acutely intoxicated," and a 2002 clinical trial
published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal determined,
"Marijuana does not have a long-term negative impact on global intelligence."
Finally, a
2001 study published in the journal Archives of General Psychiatry
found that long-term cannabis smokers who abstained from the drug
for one week "showed virtually no significant differences from control
subjects (those who had smoked marijuana less than 50 times in their
lives) on a battery of 10 neuropsychological tests." Investigators
further added, "Former heavy users, who had consumed little or no
cannabis in the three months before testing, [also] showed no significant
differences from control subjects on any of these tests on any of
the testing days."
(References:
Lack of hippocampal volume change in long-term heavy cannabis users.
American Journal of Addictions. 2005 | Neuropsychological
consequences of regular marijuana use: a twin study. Psychological
Medicine. 2004 | Non-acute (residual) neurocognitive effects
of cannabis use: A meta-analytic study. Journal of the International
Neuropsychological Society. 2003 | Current and former marijuana
use: preliminary findings of a longitudinal study of effects on
IQ in young adults. Canadian Medical Association Journal.
2002 | Neuropsychological Performance in Long-term Cannabis Users.
Archives of General Psychiatry. 2001)
Links to
the abstracts or full text to the studies cited in this article
are available
here.
March
2, 2006
Paul Armentano [send him mail]
is the senior policy analyst for the NORML Foundation
in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
Paul
Armentano Archives
|