News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Cannabis 'Can Lead To Harder Drugs' |
Title: | UK: Cannabis 'Can Lead To Harder Drugs' |
Published On: | 2006-07-05 |
Source: | Daily Telegraph (UK) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-14 00:50:55 |
CANNABIS 'CAN LEAD TO HARDER DRUGS'
The long-running debate over the dangers of cannabis will be reignited
by a study that challenges the idea that experimenting with the drug
is harmless and does not lead to further drug use.
Prof Yasmin Hurd, Dr Sabrina Spano and Dr Maria Ellgren, working at
the Karolinksa Institute, in Sweden, have demonstrated that cannabis
can enhance future sensitivity to heroin.
Studying events in the brain of adolescent rats after cannabis
exposure, they found that the drug affects the brain's natural
chemicals, called endogenous opioids. The chemicals are known to play
a role in heightening positive emotions and creating a sense of reward.
That is the same system that is stimulated by hard drugs and is also
present in humans. In the case of the rats, those exposed to cannabis
as adolescents took more heroin when given the opportunity.
Prof Hurd, who now works at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New
York, says that, remarkably, although scientists have studied how hard
drugs change the brain, similar experiments have not been carried out
until now to study the long-term effects of "softer" drugs such as
cannabis.
Cannabis is the drug most commonly used by teenagers worldwide,
typically by one in five adolescents in America and various European
countries during any given month.
This year an independent report commissioned for the Commons science
and technology committee concluded that the "gateway" theory - that
its use leads on to the use of harder drugs - "has little evidence to
support it, despite copious research".
The Swedish team's results show that the brain may "remember" previous
cannabis usage and make users vulnerable to harder drugs later in
life, specifically opioids such as heroin and morphine.
The long-running debate over the dangers of cannabis will be reignited
by a study that challenges the idea that experimenting with the drug
is harmless and does not lead to further drug use.
Prof Yasmin Hurd, Dr Sabrina Spano and Dr Maria Ellgren, working at
the Karolinksa Institute, in Sweden, have demonstrated that cannabis
can enhance future sensitivity to heroin.
Studying events in the brain of adolescent rats after cannabis
exposure, they found that the drug affects the brain's natural
chemicals, called endogenous opioids. The chemicals are known to play
a role in heightening positive emotions and creating a sense of reward.
That is the same system that is stimulated by hard drugs and is also
present in humans. In the case of the rats, those exposed to cannabis
as adolescents took more heroin when given the opportunity.
Prof Hurd, who now works at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New
York, says that, remarkably, although scientists have studied how hard
drugs change the brain, similar experiments have not been carried out
until now to study the long-term effects of "softer" drugs such as
cannabis.
Cannabis is the drug most commonly used by teenagers worldwide,
typically by one in five adolescents in America and various European
countries during any given month.
This year an independent report commissioned for the Commons science
and technology committee concluded that the "gateway" theory - that
its use leads on to the use of harder drugs - "has little evidence to
support it, despite copious research".
The Swedish team's results show that the brain may "remember" previous
cannabis usage and make users vulnerable to harder drugs later in
life, specifically opioids such as heroin and morphine.
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