News (Media Awareness Project) - US TN: Weighing the Pros and Cons of Using Marijuana |
Title: | US TN: Weighing the Pros and Cons of Using Marijuana |
Published On: | 2010-04-24 |
Source: | Chattanooga Times Free Press (TN) |
Fetched On: | 2010-04-27 21:15:55 |
WEIGHING THE PROS AND CONS OF USING MARIJUANA
As the most commonly used illicit drug in the U.S., marijuana has been
at the center of many politically charged debates because of its
illegal status and widespread use.
At the request of the White House Office of National Drug Control
Policy, the Institute of Medicine issued a report in 1999 summarizing
researchers' review of all scientific evidence on marijuana, which
concluded the drug's components have therapeutic qualities that
warrant more clinical research. The institute did not recommend "crude
marijuana," particularly when smoked, as medicine.
In the short term, marijuana's effects can include short term memory
loss, distorted perception, a sense of euphoria or, in other users,
paranoia and increased appetite.
Carcinogenic, or cancercausing, materials found in tobacco also are in
marijuana, and smoking one marijuana cigarette can deposit three to
four times as much tar in the respiratory tract as a single filtered
tobacco cigarette, according to research from Dr. Donald Tashkin, a
pulmonologist at the University of California at Los Angeles who has
studied marijuana effects for 30 years.
As with tobacco cigarettes, smoking marijuana habitually has been
shown to reduce respiratory function and harm the lining of the lungs,
according to the institute report. Smoking marijuana regularly
increases the risk of bronchitis and respiratory infection.
Supporters of medical marijuana contend that marijuana can be consumed
in ways that don't involve smoking's harmful effects, including by
eating it cooked in food products or using a vaporizer, which heats
marijuana to the point of releasing THC, the active ingredient, but
does not create toxin-containing smoke.
The largest studies of the relationship between marijuana and cancer
have not found a link between marijuana and tobacco-related cancers.
One large study, published in 1997 in the journal Cancer Causes and
Control, found no association between marijuana and cancer, except in
the case of prostate cancer in men who didn't smoke tobacco.
Another large study, led by Dr. Tashkin and published in Cancer
Epidemiology, Biomarkers and Prevention in 2006, focused on lung and
upper aerodigestive tract cancers. The study included more than 2,200
subjects and found no elevated risk among smokers of marijuana, even
heavy users.
There is no record of any death from a marijuana overdose, according
to the Institute of Medicine report, which also concluded, "Compared
with alcohol, tobacco and several prescription medications,
marijuana's abuse potential appears relatively small."
As the most commonly used illicit drug in the U.S., marijuana has been
at the center of many politically charged debates because of its
illegal status and widespread use.
At the request of the White House Office of National Drug Control
Policy, the Institute of Medicine issued a report in 1999 summarizing
researchers' review of all scientific evidence on marijuana, which
concluded the drug's components have therapeutic qualities that
warrant more clinical research. The institute did not recommend "crude
marijuana," particularly when smoked, as medicine.
In the short term, marijuana's effects can include short term memory
loss, distorted perception, a sense of euphoria or, in other users,
paranoia and increased appetite.
Carcinogenic, or cancercausing, materials found in tobacco also are in
marijuana, and smoking one marijuana cigarette can deposit three to
four times as much tar in the respiratory tract as a single filtered
tobacco cigarette, according to research from Dr. Donald Tashkin, a
pulmonologist at the University of California at Los Angeles who has
studied marijuana effects for 30 years.
As with tobacco cigarettes, smoking marijuana habitually has been
shown to reduce respiratory function and harm the lining of the lungs,
according to the institute report. Smoking marijuana regularly
increases the risk of bronchitis and respiratory infection.
Supporters of medical marijuana contend that marijuana can be consumed
in ways that don't involve smoking's harmful effects, including by
eating it cooked in food products or using a vaporizer, which heats
marijuana to the point of releasing THC, the active ingredient, but
does not create toxin-containing smoke.
The largest studies of the relationship between marijuana and cancer
have not found a link between marijuana and tobacco-related cancers.
One large study, published in 1997 in the journal Cancer Causes and
Control, found no association between marijuana and cancer, except in
the case of prostate cancer in men who didn't smoke tobacco.
Another large study, led by Dr. Tashkin and published in Cancer
Epidemiology, Biomarkers and Prevention in 2006, focused on lung and
upper aerodigestive tract cancers. The study included more than 2,200
subjects and found no elevated risk among smokers of marijuana, even
heavy users.
There is no record of any death from a marijuana overdose, according
to the Institute of Medicine report, which also concluded, "Compared
with alcohol, tobacco and several prescription medications,
marijuana's abuse potential appears relatively small."
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