.........publié par "NEW
SCIENTIST" .........publié par "NEW
SCIENTIST"
Marijuana Special Report:
A
safe high?
Claim
ONE: "Critical skills related to attention, memory and learning
are impaired among heavy users of marijuana . . ."
Most
people think of marijuana users as dreamers with
the attention span of a gnat and no memory worth the name.
Wrong. The picture emerging from psychology labs is that
there is at most a kernel of truth in this stereotype, while
some studies find no evidence of even subtle mental impairment
in heavy users. And even those that do are open to a range
of interpretations -- not necessarily worrying to marijuana
users.
Take the latest findings on which the above claim is based.
Harrison Pope and his team at Harvard University compared
65 college students who smoked marijuana daily with a control
group of students who smoked it most every other month.
After a drug-free day, the subjects completed a range of
standard mental tests. Mostly, differences between the two
groups were slight. When it came to remembering lists of
words, for example, the heavy users recalled about 1 in
10 fewer words than the light users.
But in one test the heavy users underperformed more noticeably.
The test involved watching and mimicking the simple rules
used by an experimenter to match cards with coloured shapes
on them, and then adapting whenever the rule changed. Students
who rarely smoked marijuana mistakenly carried on with the
old sorting rule on about 5 out of 100 occasions, while
heavy users made about 8 mistakes. Pope takes this seriously.
"In the real world," he says, "people have to deal all the
time with situations in which rules are changing..."
Fine. But over the years, much stronger claims have surfaced:
heavy marijuana users do badly at work or school, are more
likely to be delinquent and develop psychiatric problems,
or have abnormal brain waves. Time and again, however, such
studies encounter the same objection: are the problems caused
by smoking marijuana, or is it just that people with problems
are more likely to end up using marijuana heavily?
In the case of delinquency, schizophrenia and mental illnesses,
the balance of the evidence points to the second explanation.
Marijuana doesn't cause the problems, although it may make
them worse. Some schizophrenics, for example, are drawn
to the drug because it eases their sense of alienation.
And most researchers now accept that the evidence linking
marijuana to abnormal brain waves vanishes when people with
psychiatric problems, illnesses or a history of general
drug abuse are excluded from studies.
But what about subtler problems like the card sorting deficiencies?
After all, it might just be that smart college students
tend to smoke lightly while others smoke heavily. In which
case the card sorting results may have little to do with
marijuana.
Here opinions diverge. Pope believes the deficiency does
have something to with marijuana because his team controlled
for such obvious things as IQ differences, psychiatric histories
and heavy use of other drugs. But others are not convinced.
What worries some critics is that in this study, as in others,
the women drug users did so much better than the men in
most tests.
Deviant
males
"I know of no reason why there should be a gender difference
in cognitive response to cannabis," says John Morgan, a
pharmacologist at the City University of New York Medical
School and co-author of a controversial new book advocating
decriminalisation, Marijuana Myths Marijuana Facts. Morgan
believes the reason the males underperform in such studies
is that they are "deviant" in subtle ways that escape the
researchers' notice.
And what if the poor test results do turn out to be linked
to marijuana? It doesn't automatically follow that heavy
marijuana use is causing long-lasting brain damage. One
possibility is that, deprived of their favourite drug for
a day, heavy users suffer withdrawal symptoms or become
so grumpy and distracted that they do badly in tests. Another
is that a single drug-free day is not long enough for the
effect of their last smoke to have disappeared. The Harvard
team's follow-on experiments, in which marijuana users are
being tested over a 28-day "dry" period, should provide
answers.
Other research suggests that evidence of dramatic mental
decline is unlikely to be found, even as a result of long-term
heavy use. Over the past 25 years, Jack Fletcher at the
University of Texas in Houston and his colleagues have been
visiting Costa Rica to test the mental skills of very heavy
users. Although some of them have smoked 10 joints a day
for more than 30 years, their ability to learn and remember
lists of words is only mildly impaired (see diagram below).
And even when struggling with more demanding tasks, such
as recalling information while pressing a tapper as fast
as possible, their scores fall well within the normal range.
"The effects are subtle and subclinical," says Brian Page,
an anthropologist from the University of Miami, who was
involved in the study. "Although they could be bad for somebody
who's trying to be an arbitrage trader or Wall Street lawyer."
And, Page adds: "People who sell bicycles had better not
ride while under the influence."
Or at any rate common sense suggests they should not. The
verdict from research into the impact of marijuana on road
safety skills is less clear. In Britain as many as 1 in
10 motorists involved in serious accidents test positive
for cannabis. And figures as high as 37 per cent have emerged
from studies in urban areas of the US. However, many of
these drivers also test positive for alcohol, and even the
cases involving just cannabis cannot be equated with people
driving under the influence because the drug lingers so
long in the body.
In driving simulators, marijuana does impair visual skills
and mental dexterity. But studies of actual driving show
that even high doses of marijuana have less impact than
alcohol, perhaps because smoking it doesn't usually make
people so reckless. In one study, low doses of marijuana
made drivers more cautious.
The same broad message is likely to be true for the subtler,
longer-lasting effects of marijuana on the brain. Researchers
like Pope and Morgan may look at the data very differently,
but they agree about one thing: heavy boozing is worse for
your neurons than dope.
From
New Scientist, 21 February 1998
|