The Deadliest Side Effect of Medical Marijuana

September 9, 2010 by Tony Bylsma  
Filed under Articles

There is so much debate on the subject of medical Marijuana that one could begin to believe that there are still questions about whether or not the Drug is even harmful.

But it has been known and well documented for many years that marijuana is a harmful drug and not one major American health organization accepts crude marijuana as medicine.

The fact that this debate is still being carried on in the media is no accident. So much pro marijuana information has made it into mainstream society that, according to recent surveys, children of today do not view marijuana to be as dangerous as did children of twenty years ago. It actually appears to young people and adults that the question of whether or not marijuana is harmful is undecided.

I deliver drug abuse prevention lectures in schools from third grade through college and often hear the question, “What is the story with medical marijuana?” Although that question is regarded as complex, the answer actually is rather simple.

All drugs can be toxic and are potentially dangerous. Doctors and pharmaceutical companies are aware of this. This is why the proper dosages are clearly printed on the labels of prescription bottles.

Physicians know that drugs do not really cure the patient; the body cures itself. Sometimes the body is too slow or does not even recognize the illness. In many of these cases a drug can help the body to overcome the ailment.

Even more often, drugs are used not to cure at all, but to ease the symptoms of disease.

But all drugs produce effects other than those intended-side effects. So the task is to weigh the potential gain of a particular medication against its unwanted or damaging side effects.

The government body which approves or disapproves drugs for use in the United States is the Food and Drug Administration.

The US FDA has never approved marijuana for any use.

Marijuana is a Schedule I drug under the Controlled Substances Act. Schedule I drugs are classified as having a high potential for abuse, no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States and lack of accepted safety for use even under medical supervision. Other Schedule I drugs include Cocaine, Heroin and LSD.

Of the more than 400 chemicals in raw marijuana, only one is the reason for the uproar, Delta-9 tetra-hydro cannabinol (THC). Studies have shown that THC is a neurotoxin. A neurotoxin is a substance that damages or impairs the functions of nerve tissue.

The benefits claimed by the proponents of medical marijuana include relief of nausea due to cancer chemotherapy and reduction of intraocular (inside the eye), pressure due to glaucoma. However, approved and effective medications to relieve these symptoms have been available for quite some time.

There is an approved drug called Marinol that is not smoked, which contains synthetic THC and can be taken in more controlled doses. By taking Marinol rather than smoking marijuana, the patient avoids many toxic chemicals that are the products of combustion in smoking. But even with Marinol the manufacturer warns of side effects that include paranoid reaction, drowsiness, and abnormal thinking.

The short and long term effects of marijuana use include:

  • memory loss
  • difficulty in learning
  • distorted perception
  • trouble with thinking and problem solving
  • loss of motor skills
  • decrease in muscle strength
  • increased heart rate
  • anxiety

Are any FDA-approved medications smoked?

No. Smoking is generally a poor way to deliver medicine. It is difficult to administer safe, regulated dosages of medications by smoking. Additionally the harmful chemicals and carcinogens that are byproducts of smoking create entirely new health problems.

According to the National Institutes of Health (NIH), someone who smokes five joints per week may be taking in as many cancer-causing chemicals as may someone who smokes a full pack of cigarettes per day. Smoking one marijuana cigarette deposits about four times as much tar into the lungs as a filtered Tobacco cigarette.

Marijuana’s negative effects also last well beyond the initial use. THC is lipophilic, meaning the chemical is fat-bonding and remains stored inside a person’s body for weeks, months and possibly even years after use ceases.

In our drug rehabilitation centers, we are faced daily with the ravaging effects of drug abuse. Those who come in to our programs did not start on drugs yesterday; they traveled down a long road and made many wrong turns to get to the point of needing our help. The effort that is required to help these addicts at that point is monumental. Nearly all of them started down the road of addiction by first using marijuana, tobacco or alcohol. The “gateway effect” is real.

The deadliest side effect of medical marijuana is the message being sent to our kids, the lie that marijuana use is safe.

So it is imperative that we do not send that message. We must do our jobs to educate them as to the real facts and trust them to make the right decision.

For advice regarding addiction or help finding the best drug addiction treatment, go to http://www.TheRoadOut.org/addiction-help.html

Author: Tony Bylsma
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
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Six Things That No One Ever Told You About Marijuana

April 28, 2010 by Tony Bylsma  
Filed under Articles

Marijuana addiction? Sounds like two words that do not seem to go together. You cannot really get addicted to it, right? Marijuana is not like cigarettes with their nasty nicotine – it’s actually more “recreational” and even “medical”-right? {mosimage}

Watch enough movies and television and you may get the idea that behind closed doors across America, everyone’s toking up-as if it were a dirty little secret that even the most normal of folks kept to themselves, although their close friends “might have known…” But here are six things no one ever told you about marijuana – the real dirty little secrets of marijuana itself.

Marijuana has its own marketing campaign. Whether Madison Avenue ad men sit around large polished wooden tables in their suits and put together focus groups and smile happily at revenue charts is not the point. But look around and you will see a campaign does exist, complete with late night talk show hosts implying their closet use of it, famous singers and actors extolling its virtues so much so that it feels like the “undrug”- positioned apart from those “other, more dangerous” ones and gobbling up its own special piece of market share in your mind. Not as dangerous? Keep reading…

It has real withdrawal symptoms. Researchers at McLean Hospital in Belmont, Massachusetts and Columbia University in New York City found that regular smokers of marijuana who stop smoking it indeed experience withdrawal. Additionally, studies have shown that aggression, anxiety, stomach pain and increased irritability manifest themselves during abstinence from the drug.

It speeds up your heart. Marijuana use actually increases the heart rate as much as 50 percent. Not only that: it can cause chest pain in people who have a poor blood supply to the heart-and it does so much more rapidly than tobacco smoke can do.

Stoners aren’t just “cute” in their goofiness – they actually do get lower grades, and they are less likely to graduate from high school than their non-smoking peers, studies show. For heavy smokers-those who smoke it nearly every day-critical skills related to attention, memory and learning are significantly impaired even after they had not used the drug for at least 24 hours

That ‘medical marijuana’ is safe is a lie. In fact, no where is it even legal. The US Food and Drug Administration has never approved marijuana for any use. It is a Schedule I drug under the Controlled Substances Act, with high potential for abuse just like Cocaine, Heroin and LSD. Benefits claimed by medical marijuana proponents: the THC in marijuana provides relief of nausea due to cancer chemotherapy and reduces intraocular (inside the eye) pressure due to glaucoma. However, approved and effective medications to relieve these symptoms have been available for quite some time. Marinol, containing synthetic THC, is taken (not smoked) in controlled doses. But even this medication has side effects including paranoid reaction, drowsiness and abnormal thinking. Studies have shown that real THC as found in marijuana is actually a neurotoxin, a substance that damages or impairs the functions of nerve tissue. And to get this neurotoxin from marijuana, you’ll also need to be willing to ingest more than

400 other chemicals found in marijuana.

Marijuana effectively cuts you off from others. It might seem social to pass the dutchie on the left hand side, but burned out users are so unaware of their surroundings that they do not respond when friends speak to them, and do not realize they even have a problem. Marijuana compromises ones ability to learn, to remember information and-the more it is used-the more likely it is that a user will fall behind in accumulating intellectual, job or social skills.

Tony Bylsma

Tony Bylsma CCDC, is a rehabilitation counselor and drug prevention speaker in Los Angeles

Blog: http://www.detoxrehab.org
Website: http://www.drugindependence.org

Author: Tony Bylsma
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
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