.000000THREE THINGS MARIJUANA DOESN'T DO from California NORML Reports, April 1992

(1) NO BRAIN DAMAGE SEEN IN MARIJUANA-EXPOSED MONKEYS

Two new scientific studies have failed to find evidence

of brain damage in monkeys exposed to marijuana, undercutting

claims that marijuana causes brain damage in humans.

The studies were conducted by two independent

research groups. The first, conducted by Dr. William Slikker,

Jr. and others at the National Center for Toxicological Research

in Arkansas examined some 64 rhesus monkeys, half of which

were exposed to daily or weekly doses of marijuana smoke for

a year. The other, by Gordon T. Pryor and Charles Rebert at SRI

International in Menlo Park, California, which is still

unpublished, looked at over 30 rhesus monkeys that had inhaled

marijuana one to three times a day over periods of 6 to 12

months. Neither study found evidence of structural or

neurochemical changes in the brains of the monkeys when

examined a few months after cessation of smoking.

The new results cast doubt on earlier studies

purporting to show brain damage in animals. The most famous

of these was a study by Dr. Robert Heath, who claimed to find

brain damage in three monkeys heavily exposed to cannabis.

Heath's results failed to win general acceptance in the

scientific community because of the small number of subjects,

questionable controls, and heavy doses.

Subsequent rat experiments by Dr. Slikker and others

reported persistent structural changes in the brain cells of

rats chronically exposed to THC. The studies did not show that

pot kills brain cells, as alleged by some pot critics, but they

did show degeneration of the nerve connections between brain

cells in the hippocampus, where THC is known to be active.

Although scientists have regarded the animal evidence

as inconclusive, some critics have cited it as proof that pot

causes brain damage in humans. Thus Andrew Mecca, the

director of California Department of Alcohol and Drug Abuse,

recently stated on the Ron Reagan, Jr. talk show (Sep. 2, 1991)

that marijuana "leaves a black protein substance in the

synaptic cleft" of brain cells, a claim apparently based on

Heath's monkeys. When asked by a NORML member for his

evidence, Mecca sent a list of three references, none of which

turned out to have anything to do with brain damage.

Although the new monkey studies found no physical

brain damage, they did observe behavioral changes from

.00marijuana. Slikker's group found that monkeys exposed once a

day to the human equivalent of four or five joints showed

persistent effects throughout the day. Slikker says that the

effects faded gradually after they were taken off marijuana,

and were not detectable seven months later, when they were

sacrificed. Autopsies did reveal lingering chemical changes in

the immune cells in the lungs of monkeys that had inhaled THC.

However, Slikker's group concluded that experimental exposure

to marijuana smoke "does not compromise the general health of

the rhesus monkey."

References:

William Slikker, Jr. et al, "Chronic Marijuana Smoke Exposure in the Rhesus

Monkey," Fundamental and Applied Toxicology 17: 321-32 (1991)

Guy Cabral et al, "Chronic Marijuana Smoke Alters Alveolar Macrophage

Morphology and Protein Expression, Pharmacology Biochemistry and

Behavior 40: 643-9 (1991)

Merle Paule et al., "Chronic Marijuana Smoke Exposure in the Rhesus Monkey

II: Effects on Progressive Ratio and Conditioned Position

Responding," Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics

260: 210-22 (1992)

(2) POT FOUND NOT TO CAUSE FETAL ALCOHOL SYNDROME

A new study of children born to marijuana-smoking

mothers found no link between marijuana exposure and the

birth defects of fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS). The new study,

by Dr. Susan J. Astley of the University of Washington,

published in the January, 1992 issue of Pediatrics,

contradicted a 1982 study by Dr. Ralph Hingson, in which

prenatal exposure to marijuana was found to increase the risk

of FAS.

Hingson's results, which have not been replicated, have

been questioned on various methodological grounds, in

particular the difficulty of controlling for combined drinking

and pot use.

The new study looked for facial deformities

symptomatic of FAS in 40 children whose mothers had smoked

marijuana heavily during pregnancy and 40 controls, It found no

association between marijuana and FAS, but deformities were

observed in children of women who drank 2 ounces of alcohol

per day or took cocaine.

(3) NEW STUDY FINDS POT DOESN'T LOWER TESTOSTERONE

A new study by Dr. Robert Block at the University of

Iowa disputes the commonly held notion that marijuana alters

the level of testosterone and other sex hormones.

The study contradicted a widely publicized 1974 study

by Dr. R.C. Kolodony, which reported decreased testosterone

levels in men who smoked marijuana chronically.

The U. of Iowa study found that chronic marijuana use

had no effect on testosterone, luteinizing hormone, follicle

stimulating hormone, prolactin and cortisol in men or women.

Noting that six other studies had failed to show

lowered testosterone levels in men, Dr. Block concluded: "It

appears that marijuana, even heavy use of the kind that's

typical in the United States, doesn't alter testosterone levels."

However, he cautioned that heavy use might have other

adverse effects, including "possible effects on reproductive

function and mild, selective cognitive impairments associated

with heavy, chronic use."

Block's study is published in Drug and Alcohol

Dependence, Vol. 28: 121-8 (1991).