Marijuana Use Causes Brain Damage Confirmed (Explains A Lot About The Way The Country is Run)
Medical Daily ^
| August 9, 2012
| Christine Hsu
Scientists have confirmed the long-held suspicion that frequent heavy
marijuana use damages the brain's memory and learning capacity.
"Our
results suggest that long-term cannabis use is hazardous to white
matter in the developing brain. This was especially true for those who
had started in adolescence, as we know the brain is still developing
during this time," Lead researcher Dr. Marc Seal, from Melbourne’s
Murdoch Children's Research Institute said in a university release.
Scientists
from MCRI, Melbourne University and Wollongong University compared MRI
scans of the brain for 59 people who had been using marijuana for an
average of 15 years to 33 healthy people who had never used the drug.
After
measuring changes to the volume, strength and integrity of white matter
in the brains of all participants, researchers found that long-term
heavy cannabis users had disruptions in their white matter fibers.
The
brain's white matter is responsible for information passed between
different areas of grey matter within the nervous system, and unlike
grey matter, which are the brain's thinking areas that peaks at age
eight, white matter continues to develop as people age.
Seal and his team found that there was more than 80 percent reduction of white matter in the brains of users.
Additionally,
researchers found that the average age of participants in the study
started using cannabis when they were 16 years old, participants who
started using the drug at a younger age like 10 or 11 had even more
severe brain damage.
"This is the first study to demonstrate the
age at which regular cannabis use begins is a key factor in determining
the severity of the brain damage," Seal said, according to AAP.
He
explained that marijuana interferes with naturally occurring
cannabinoid receptors in the brain and by introducing external
cannabinoids into a person's system it stops their white matter from
maturing.
Researchers linked the significant changes in the white
matter in the brain's hippocampus and commissural fibers, suggesting
that long-term marijuana use may lead to memory impairment and deficits
in learning and concentration ability.
"These people can have trouble learning new things and they are going to have trouble remembering things," Seal said.
"We don't know if the changes are irreversible but we do know that these changes are quite significant," he added.
No comments:
Post a Comment