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Does Cannabis Use Cause Schizophrenia?

dufous

Well-known member
Does Cannabis Use Cause Schizophrenia?

As the drug becomes more popular, concerns have been raised that its use can lead to psychotic disorders. Here’s what scientists know for sure, and what they don’t.

By Benedict Carey
Jan. 17, 2019
The New York Times


Nearly a century after the film “Reefer Madness” alarmed the nation, some policymakers and doctors are again becoming concerned about the dangers of marijuana, although the reefers are long gone.

Experts now distinguish between the “new cannabis” — legal, highly potent, available in tabs, edibles and vapes — and the old version, a far milder weed passed around in joints. Levels of T.H.C., the chemical that produces marijuana’s high, have been rising for at least three decades, and it’s now possible in some states to buy vape cartridges containing little but the active ingredient.

The concern is focused largely on the link between heavy usage and psychosis in young people. Doctors first suspected a link some 70 years ago, and the evidence has only accumulated since then. In a forthcoming book, “Tell Your Children,” Alex Berenson, a former Times reporter, argues that legalization is putting a generation at higher risk of schizophrenia and other psychotic syndromes. Critics, including leading researchers, have called the argument overblown, and unfaithful to the science.

Can cannabis use cause psychosis?

Yes, but so can overuse of caffeine, nicotine, alcohol, stimulants and hallucinogens. Psychosis is a symptom: a temporary disorientation that resembles a waking dream, with odd, imagined sights and sounds, often accompanied by paranoia or an ominous sensation. The vast majority of people who have this kind of psychotic experience do not go on to develop a persistent condition such as schizophrenia, which is characterized by episodes of psychosis that recur for years, as well as cognitive problems and social withdrawal.

Can heavy use cause schizophrenia or other syndromes?

That is the big question, and so far the evidence is not strong enough to answer one way or the other. Even top scientists who specialize in marijuana research are divided, drawing opposite conclusions from the same data.

“I’ve been doing this research for 25 years, and it’s polarizing even among academics,” said Margaret Haney, a professor of neurobiology at Columbia University Medical Center. “This is what the marijuana field is like.”

The debate centers on the distinction between correlation and causation. People with psychotic problems often use cannabis regularly; this is a solid correlation, backed by numerous studies. But it is unclear which came first, the cannabis habit or the psychoses. Children who later develop schizophrenia often seem to retreat into their own world, stalked periodically by bizarre fears and fantasies well outside the range of usual childhood imagination, and well before they are exposed to cannabis. Those who go on to become regular marijuana users often use other substances as well, including alcohol and cigarettes, making it more difficult for researchers to untangle causation.

Consider cigarettes, the least mind-altering of these substances. In a 2015 study, a team led by Dr. Kenneth S. Kendler of Virginia Commonwealth University analyzed medical data on nearly two million people in Sweden. The data followed the individuals over time, from young adulthood, when most schizophrenia diagnoses occur, to middle age. Smoking was a predictor for later development of the disorder, and in what doctors call a dose-response relationship: the more a person smoked, the higher the risk.

Yet nicotine attracts nowhere near the concern that cannabis does, in part because the two drugs are so different in their everyday effects: mildly stimulated versus stoned. Indeed, some scientists have studied nicotine as a partial treatment for schizophrenia, to blunt the disorders effects on thinking and memory.

Is it biologically plausible that cannabis could cause a psychotic disorder?

Yes. Brain scientists know very little about the underlying biology of psychotic conditions, other than that hundreds of common gene variants are likely involved. Schizophrenia, for instance, is not a uniform disorder but an umbrella term for an array of unexplained problems involving recurrent psychosis, and other common symptoms.

Even so, there is circumstantial evidence for a biological mechanism. Psychotic disorders tend to emerge in late adolescence or early adulthood, during or after a period of rapid brain development. In the teenage years, the brain strips away unneeded or redundant connections between brain cells, in a process called synaptic pruning. This editing is concentrated in the prefrontal cortex, the region behind the forehead where thinking and planning occur — and the region that is perturbed in psychotic conditions.

The region is rich with so-called CB1 receptors, which are involved in the pruning, and are engaged by cannabis use. And alterations to the pruning process may well increase schizophrenia risk, according to recent research at the Broad Institute of M.I.T. and Harvard. In a 2016 analysis, scientists there found that people with the disorder often have a gene variant that appears to accelerate the pruning process.

What does this mean for me?

Experts may debate whether cannabis use can lead to psychotic disorders, but they mostly agree on how to minimize one’s risk.

Psychotic conditions tend to run in families, which suggests there is an inherited genetic vulnerability. Indeed, according to some studies, people prone to or at heightened risk of psychosis seem to experience the effects of cannabis differently than peers without such a history. The users experience a more vivid high, but they also are more likely to experience psychosis-like effects such as paranoia.

The evidence so far indicates that one’s familial risk for psychotic disorders outweighs any added effect of cannabis use. In a 2014 study, a team led by Ashley C. Proal and Dr. Lynn E. DeLisi of Harvard Medical School recruited cannabis users with and without a family history of schizophrenia, as well as non-users with and without such a history. The researchers made sure the cannabis users did not use other drugs in addition, a factor that muddied earlier studies. The result: there was a heightened schizophrenia risk among people with a family history, regardless of cannabis use.

“My study clearly shows that cannabis does not cause schizophrenia by itself,” said Dr. DeLisi. “Rather, a genetic predisposition is necessary. It is highly likely, based on the results of this study and others, that cannabis use during adolescence through to age 25, when the brain is maturing and at its peak of growth in a genetically vulnerable individual, can initiate the onset of schizophrenia.”

Because marijuana has been illegal for so long, research that could settle the question has been sorely lacking, although that has begun to change. The National Institutes of Health have launched a $300 million project that will track thousands of children from the age of 9 or 10 through adolescence, and might help clarify causation.

For the near future, expert opinions likely will be mixed. “Usually it is the research types who are doing ‘the sky is falling’ bit, but here it is switched,” said Dr. Jay Geidd, a professor of psychiatry at the University of California, San Diego. “The researchers are wary of overselling the dangers, as was clearly done in the past. However, clinicians overwhelmingly endorse seeing many more adolescents with ‘paranoia’” of some kind.

In short: Regularly using the new, high-potency cannabis may indeed be a risk for young people who are related to someone with a psychotic condition. On that warning, at least, most experts seem to agree.
 

Gypsy Nirvana

Recalcitrant Reprobate -
Administrator
Veteran
Hold on - I will just have to first discuss it with the other half of this personality. Ha!

I reckon psychosis is contagious - depressed people often make other people depressed etc - and some people are more sound of mind than others - so if you are going to use any mind altering substance - its best to be able to know first - where your own mind is at - or you can get VERY lost.
 

aridbud

automeister
ICMag Donor
Veteran
It can exacerbate symptoms if one is prone to brain chemical imbalance, but "cause" it??? No.
 

OldCoolSativa

Well-known member
I don't think you can give a definitive yes or no answer in the absence of good, long-term research on the matter. That said, given the number of pot smokers I know (a lot) and the number of them that are schizophrenics (zero), it's probably not much of a problem, if it's a problem at all.

I have noticed a number of media outlets and pundits getting on the cannabis-is-bad-for-you wagon lately. Fuck them. How many lives does alcohol ruin each year?
 

armedoldhippy

Well-known member
Veteran
i've been a daily smoker for over 50 years now, as have most of my friends. (not many left now) there have been zero incidents from weed, if you ignore bad aftereffects from getting caught with it by LEO or snagged by piss tests at work. :tiphat:
 

'Boogieman'

Well-known member
Look into metal exposure and schitzophrenia, metal pipes could be a cause here not weed especially if someone smoked from tin foil pipes. Lead, aluminum, and many other metals are linked.
 

Douglas.Curtis

Autistic Diplomat in Training
I've used cannabis for 30+ years, and the last 8 or so have been with varying amounts of CBD. I can say I definitely can tell the difference mentally between heavy CBD usage, and the use of heavy THC without CBD.

I definitely experience mild psychosis symptoms when it's all THC and very little CBD. Up the CBD a little and it goes away completely, right back to straight logical. Everyone is different though. :) I haven't had CBD regularly for about a month now, and anyone who reads my posts regularly has probably noticed. lol

Take away factoid? Massive THC cannabis is like eating a hamburger with a HUGE meat patty, and a tiny bun, an itty bitty slice of pickle, a couple wisps of onion, a drop of mustard and a smear of ketchup. If you like meat sprinkled with a little flavor, you'll love it. :D Most of us find it a little unbalanced though. lol
 

JustSumTomatoes

Indicas make dreams happen
I've known a few people who have Schizophrenia and they loved smoking weed. Unfortunately, from what I've seen with them it tends to bring out more schizophrenic symptoms in them. I think weed helps with the depression and anxiety associated with the disorder but makes other symptoms worse.

I personally don't think pot causes Schizophrenia because the number of pot users has increased over time, but the percentage of Schizophrenia cases has remained about the same with respect to population increase. I think heavy pot use can bring it out of people earlier but it doesn't cause what was behind the curtain to begin with.
 

VenturaHwy

Active member
ICMag Donor
Veteran
I've known a few people who have Schizophrenia and they loved smoking weed. Unfortunately, from what I've seen with them it tends to bring out more schizophrenic symptoms in them. I think weed helps with the depression and anxiety associated with the disorder but makes other symptoms worse.

I personally don't think pot causes Schizophrenia because the number of pot users has increased over time, but the percentage of Schizophrenia cases has remained about the same with respect to population increase. I think heavy pot use can bring it out of people earlier but it doesn't cause what was behind the curtain to begin with.

Yeah I know 3 people who have Schizophrenia. One was my best friend for about 30 years. He loved to smoke weed. It wasn't until later that he became majorly paranoid. It was obvious to me but to him it was other people, they were causing the problems. The symptoms are classical. He had more people following him than a Russian spy in the US.

The other 2 were women. It runs in families.
 

TychoMonolyth

Boreal Curing
I thinks can push someone over the edge if they have the genetic propensity to be in that space to start with. Just like someone who can become diabetic if they're digging into a bag of cookies every night. Someone that has the genetic markers for diabetes can never get it if they don't eat sugar.
 

mexcurandero420

See the world through a puff of smoke
Veteran
According to Lester Grinspoon there is no rise in people affected by schizophrenia after use of marijuana.
 

Bobby Boucher

Active member
In the old country, where nearly everyone is malnurished, these stories circulate a lot. When you are already sick and vulnerable.. who knows.

My uncle spontaneously developed schizophrenia at the age of 7, bless his crazy little heart. We look exactly alike, so fingers crossed.
 

Lost in a SOG

GrassSnakeGenetics
Causation with mental disorders is just not that straight forward in 99% of cases..

You are born with genetic predispositions to certain neurotransmitters which in part explains familial behaviour patterns, and predispositions to certain addictions.. how we deal with those predispositions comes down to us..

Guns dont kill people, people do.
 

Mr.Poison1

Outdoor Specialist
Veteran
I think schizophrenia is a genetic factor.
Be careful who do you marry in your life time if your" partner" got a brain fucked family you can be serious in trouble.

In my opinion only good genetic should multiply in this cold world.
Some of this sick people got a "Suicide gene"
in itself when they got to much stress they kill himself.
 

White Beard

Active member
Schizophrenia, psychosis, and depression are not interchangeable - they’re not even on the same spectrum. Passing changes/feelings/sensations while smoking weed are not the same as symptoms, even if stoners *are* prone to conclusion-jumping.

That said, someone who genuinely displays psychotic reactions or schizophrenic breaks may or may not increase the frequency or severity of the manifestations while on cannabis.

Such folks should be working with a medical professional, with or without cannabis.
 

ion

Active member
Does Cannabis Use Cause Schizophrenia?

As the drug becomes more popular, concerns have been raised that its use can lead to psychotic disorders. ~~~~~~Here’s what scientists know for sure, and what they don’t.~~~~~


~~~According to Lester Grinspoon there is no rise in people affected by schizophrenia after use of marijuana. ~~~

oookay' gods, kings, lords,priests,santa claus.....doctors/Phd/scientists.......easter bunny?

first, if you want to know for yourself ya got to look hard. start with psychologists/psychiatrists in the vein called "whistleblowers" who have unequivocally stated that psych health/modern psychology/the DSM is all about prescribing fools meds......the people who tinker with your head whilst on a cot dont know shit from shinola.

as for any doctor/scientist making statements about schizo and cannabs shoulld be viewed for entertainment purposes only.....SHEESH, seriously? ask one of those oxygen thieves what conciousness is and watch them do a verbal jig, sorry but they dont know jack.....or at least nothing more than it would take you thirty min on the innertube to find out.

re; what gypsy said.

and white beard, too;
Don’t vote for rich people - they’re not going to vote for YOU...

of course, then you dont vote so........
 

therevverend

Well-known member
Veteran
When I was 18-19 years old my best friend was a hippy long hair kid. He was a year or two younger then me, extremely smart, into chemistry and psychedelics. We'd bonded at a summer beach party, I'd taken LSD and we spent the night chatting. The ocean was glowing with bioluminescent bacteria it was incredible.

Over the next couple years we did the teenage stoner stuff, hanging out trying to get high, hitchhiking around, going to festivals, the semi-freedom when you bum around in your late teen years still living with adults. I noticed his mood started to darken not long after we'd gotten a huge bag of cubensis. He got burned by some punks, had a bad experience with a girl. Then he went stark raving mad.

He believed his parents were poisoning his food, that I was going to murder him and leave him to bleed to death in a ditch. Classic schizophrenia. The next time I saw him he'd gained 150 lbs and was covered in boils. Reaction to the medication. I felt terrible for his parents, I respected them a great deal, his dad had an amazing record collection, thousands of them. Holy Modal Rounders, Flying Burrito Brothers he had everything.

We tried to hang out a few more times but it wasn't the same. He'd try too hard, it was too obvious we were trying too hard and there was an elephant in the room. The medication kept the worst effects under control but he was still weird. He lived in an assisted living halfway house with the other nuts in town. The guilt I felt was terrible. I haven't seen him in over 20 years.

A few years back he sent me a postcard. The usual weird/cool sort of thing he'd send. I figured out where he lives. When I was looking for info on another buddy who'd just died I saw he'd made the local newspaper in the arrest records. A couple counts of malicious mischief. Well, he'd always been a bit malicious and mischievous. Next time I go back to the hometown I need to look him up. There's too many people I say that about.

Whether the drugs caused the schizophrenia, I don't think they helped. It's a strange disease because there's no sign of it until you reach adulthood. One day the person is normal and the next they're not. This is also the age people begin experimenting with drugs I'm not surprised people see a correlation whether it's real or not.

When you're a teenager smoking ganja with your friends you share the same wavelength, you can almost communicate telepathically. It was disconcerting how overnight he became a stranger. It bothers me when people toss around words like crazy and psychotic without understanding what that really is. It's terrifying if you've seen it happen.

Any research that can be done, any connections to understanding why people unhinge is needed. Doctors have a much better grip on schizophrenia then they did 20 years ago but it's still a mystery. As others have posted it's important to understand this is different from having a bad trip, getting depressed or perma-fried. If there is a connection with cannabis it needs to be understood it could be a key to unlock the secrets of the disease.
 

White Beard

Active member
the DSM is all about prescribing fools meds......the people who tinker with your head whilst on a cot dont know shit from shinola.

as for any doctor/scientist making statements about schizo and cannabs shoulld be viewed for entertainment purposes only.....SHEESH, seriously? ask one of those oxygen thieves what conciousness is and watch them do a verbal jig, sorry but they dont know jack....


of course, then you dont vote so........
I pretty much agree with you about the dam, frankly...you both don’t know and don’t care who Grinspoon is, but he was THE ONLY VOICE pro-cannabis with professional status during the ‘70, when the heat was really on. If you’d respect Jack, respect Lester.

And I absolutely *DO* vote, every time, ever since I came of age. It’s my duty as a citizen, and I take it seriously.
 
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