Friday, February 11, 2011

Connection discovered among marijuana use and psychological condition

Research reveals connection between weed use and psychological condition

Weed use and psychological condition has been connected in a new research. Marijuana use was linked to mental illness by a review of 83 studies involving more than 8,000 patients, which showed that using marijuana caused mental condition symptoms to emerge far earlier in individuals that were at risk for developing schizophrenia and other forms of psychosis. It’s "Reefer Madness" all over again.

Psychological condition for Marijuana users

Emerging study has found a link between marijuana use and quicker onset mental illness for individuals predisposed to creating psychological illness, according to WebMD. The study can be published in the June issue of Archives of General Psychiatry, a psychiatric science journal. Dr. Matthew Large who’s from the Prince of Wales Hospital located in Sydney, Australia, led the team that did the research. Marijuana was linked in the study to psychological health getting brought about earlier, especially schizophrenia, in the 83 individual studies that over 8,000 individuals were involved in.

Cannabis and other narcotic use

The link suggested by the research is that people at risk for developing mental illness for instance schizophrenia can develop symptoms earlier if they use marijuana. Subjects in the research that were weed users developed schizophrenia symptoms 2.7 years earlier than those who did not. People who used multiple substances, including marijuana, cocaine and other drugs, developed symptoms of psychological illness two years earlier than people who didn’t use drugs. When alcohol was the only thing used, it didn't accelerate any of the symptoms. This is what Time reports. Tobacco use is noted in the study as not having enough evidence to discover any impact on psychological condition.

Higher risk of psychological illness suggests you use fewer narcotics

For years individuals have been told not to use psychoactive substances. This is especially the case for those at risk for psychological illnesses. Links among schizophrenia and the use of cannabis has been shown in many studies. However, no link has ever been found suggesting that marijuana use causes schizophrenia, only that those at risk can have their symptoms made worse or brought about earlier by using cannabis.

Information from

Web MD

webmd.com/schizophrenia/news/20110207/earlier-onset-of-schizophrenia-linked-to-pot

Health Land

healthland.time.com/2011/02/07/marijuana-linked-with-earlier-onset-of-schizophrenia-in-research-review/

Archives of General Psychiatry

archpsyc.ama-assn.org/cgi/reprint/archgenpsychiatry.2011.5v1



No comments: