October 31, 2005
Green Versus Brown
Although both marijuana and tobacco smoke are packed with cancer-causing chemicals, other qualities of marijuana seem to keep it from promoting lung cancer, according to a new report. In the latest issue of Harm Reduction Journal, Dr. Robert Melamede of the University of Colorado in Colorado Springs says that the difference rests in the often opposing actions of the nicotine in tobacco and the active ingredient, THC, in marijuana.
After the jump, read the entire article which I grabbed in case it goes bye-bye. I know a few people who are going to be very excited to hear about this bit o' news.
Via Phyll
Smoking pot not a major cancer risk: report
Reuters Health
October 26, 2005 09:04:12 AM PST
Although both marijuana and tobacco smoke are packed with cancer-causing chemicals, other qualities of marijuana seem to keep it from promoting lung cancer, according to a new report.
The difference rests in the often opposing actions of the nicotine in tobacco and the active ingredient, THC, in marijuana, says Dr. Robert Melamede of the University of Colorado in Colorado Springs.
He reviewed the scientific evidence supporting this contention in a recent issue of Harm Reduction Journal.
Whereas nicotine has several effects that promote lung and other types of cancer, THC acts in ways that counter the cancer-causing chemicals in marijuana smoke, Melamede explained in an interview with Reuters Health.
"THC turns down the carcinogenic potential," he said.
For example, lab research indicates that nicotine activates a body enzyme that converts certain chemicals in both tobacco and marijuana smoke into cancer-promoting form. In contrast, studies in mice suggest that THC blocks this enzyme activity.
Another key difference, Melamede said, is in the immune system effects of tobacco and marijuana. Smoke sends irritants into the respiratory system that trigger an immune-regulated inflammatory response, which involves the generation of potentially cell-damaging substances called free radicals. These particles are believed to contribute to a range of diseases, including cancer.
But cannabinoids -- both those found in marijuana and the versions found naturally in the body -- have been shown to dial down this inflammatory response, Melamede explained.
Another difference between tobacco and marijuana smoking, he said, has to do with cells that line the respiratory tract. While these cells have receptors that act as docks for nicotine, similar receptors for THC and other cannabinoids have not been found.
Nicotine, Melamede said, appears to keep these cells from committing "suicide" when they are genetically damaged, by smoking, for instance. When such cells do not kill themselves off, they are free to progress into tumors.
THC, however, does not appear to act this way in the respiratory tract -- though, in the brain, where there are cannabinoid receptors, it may have the beneficial effect of protecting cells from death when they are damaged from an injury or stroke, according to Melamede.
All of this, he said, fits in with population studies that have failed to link marijuana smoking with a higher risk of lung cancer -- though there is evidence that pot users have more respiratory problems, such as chronic cough and frequent respiratory infections.
If marijuana does not promote lung cancer, that could factor into the ongoing debate over so-called medical marijuana. Melamede said he believes "marijuana has loads of medicinal value," for everything from multiple sclerosis, to the chronic pain of arthritis, to nausea caused by cancer treatment.
U.S. government officials, however, maintain that the evidence for medical marijuana is not there. Ten states allow people to use marijuana with a doctor's prescription, but the Supreme Court has ruled that federal law trumps state law.
SOURCE: Harm Reduction Journal, October 18, 2005.
Posted by Jefe at 6:42 PM, filed under ramblingsAs a Marijuana user and cancer survivor, this is great news to me. When I was going through Chemotherapy for colon cancer I was given many prescriptions to help me feel “better”.
I use the word better because during chemo there was no way I could feel good, normal or healthy; so better was all I was hoping for. The prescribed medications (my home state of Michigan does not recognize Medicinal Marijuana) did an ok job at relieving my symptoms. Yet as we all hear, the increasing costs of pharmaceuticals is crazy, had I not had good insurance my prescription costs alone would have been over $5000 per month. One pill I took 3 times a day every day cost $40 a pill. Even with insurance I still spent several hundred dollars a month on pharmaceutical drugs. All these drugs did an ok job, but sometimes balancing all the pills could be crazy.
Then there was Marijuana. She was a green goddess of hope in my despair. It was quick, and effective at making me feel more human. I smoked morning noon and night. Without it I was completely unable to eat, I ran out of pot once and didn’t eat for almost 2 days, I tried. If I didn’t eat I’d feel even worse than if I did sometimes. It helped calm my GI tract after I’d eaten. Marijuana can also just make you feel good, the reason why there are millions of recreational marijuana smokers out there, and honestly I didn’t have too much in my life at the time to make me feel good. And the funniest part was the monthly pot cost about the same as the monthly co pays on my prescription drugs.
I had many worries about my choice to use Marijuana, first and foremost was the chance of getting in trouble with the law. Also I feared that I might get through my colon cancer only to develop lung cancer from the Pot. Now hearing this report it calms one of my old worries, and I hope that maybe this news can further the cause of Medicinal Marijuana so it can someday be legal everywhere.
I’m cancer free and healthy now. But I will always have to wonder if the cancer returns, will I have to become a criminal to treat my symptoms. Hopefully not.
