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Is marijuana bad for your brain? - Anees Bahji

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    In 1970,
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    marijuana was classified
    as a schedule 1 drug in the United States:
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    the strictest designation possible,
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    meaning it was completely illegal
    and had no recognized medical uses.
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    For decades, this view persisted
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    and set back research
    on the drug's mechanisms and effects.
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    Today, marijuana’s therapeutic benefits
    are widely acknowledged,
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    and some nations
    have legalized medical use
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    or are moving in that direction.
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    But a growing recognition
    for marijuana’s medical value
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    doesn’t answer the question:
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    is recreational marijuana use
    bad for your brain?
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    Marijuana acts
    on the body’s cannabinoid system,
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    which has receptors
    all over the brain and body.
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    Molecules native to the body,
    called endocannabinoids,
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    also act on these receptors.
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    We don’t totally understand
    the cannabinoid system,
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    but it has one feature
    that provides a big clue to its function.
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    Most neurotransmitters
    travel from one neuron to the next
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    through a synapse to propagate a message.
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    But endocannabinoids
    travel in the opposite direction.
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    When a message passes
    from the one neuron to the next,
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    the receiving neuron
    releases endocannabinoids.
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    Those endocannabinoids
    travel backward
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    to influence the sending neuron—
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    essentially giving it feedback
    from the receiving neuron.
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    This leads scientists
    to believe that the endocannabinoid system
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    serves primarily
    to modulate other kinds of signals—
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    amplifying some and diminishing others.
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    Feedback from endocannabinoids
    slows down rates of neural signaling.
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    That doesn’t necessarily mean
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    it slows down behavior
    or perception, though.
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    For example,
    slowing down a signal that inhibits smell
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    could actually make smells more intense.
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    Marijuana contains
    two main active compounds,
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    tetrahydrocannabinol or THC,
    and cannabidiol, or CBD.
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    THC is thought to be primarily responsible
    for marijuana’s psychoactive effects
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    on behavior, cognition, and perception,
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    while CBD is responsible
    for the non-psychoactive effects.
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    Like endocannabinoids,
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    THC slows down signaling
    by binding to cannabinoid receptors.
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    But it binds to receptors
    all over this sprawling, diffuse system
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    at once,
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    whereas endocannabinoids
    are released in a specific place
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    in response to a specific stimulus.
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    This widespread activity
    coupled with the fact
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    that the cannabinoid system
    indirectly affects many other systems,
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    means that each person’s
    particular brain chemistry, genetics,
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    and previous life experience
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    largely determine
    how they experience the drug.
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    That’s true much more so with marijuana
    than with other drugs
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    that produce their effects
    through one or a few specific pathways.
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    So the harmful effects, if any,
    vary considerably from person to person.
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    And while we don’t know
    how exactly how marijuana
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    produces specific harmful effects,
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    there are clear risk factors
    that can increase peoples’ likelihood
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    of experiencing them.
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    The clearest risk factor is age.
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    In people younger than 25,
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    cannabinoid receptors
    are more concentrated in the white matter
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    than in people over 25.
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    The white matter
    is involved in communication,
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    learning, memory, and emotions.
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    Frequent marijuana use
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    can disrupt the development
    of white matter tracts,
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    and also affect the brain’s ability
    to grow new connections.
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    This may damage long-term learning ability
    and problem solving.
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    For now, it’s unclear
    how severe this damage can be
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    or whether it’s reversible.
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    And even among young people,
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    the risk is higher the younger someone is—
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    much higher for a 15 year old
    than a 22 year old, for instance.
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    Marijuana can also cause hallucinations
    or paranoid delusions.
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    Known as marijuana-induced psychosis,
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    these symptoms usually subside
    when a person stops using marijuana.
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    But in rare cases,
    psychosis doesn’t subside,
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    instead unmasking
    a persistent psychotic disorder.
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    A family history of psychotic disorders,
    like schizophrenia,
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    is the clearest, though not the only,
    risk factor for this effect.
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    Marijuana-induced psychosis
    is also more common among young adults,
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    though it’s worth noting
    that psychotic disorders
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    usually surface in this age range anyway.
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    What’s unclear in these cases
    is whether the psychotic disorder
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    would have appeared
    without marijuana use—
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    whether marijuana use triggers it early,
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    is a catalyst for a tipping point
    that wouldn’t have been crossed otherwise,
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    or whether the reaction
    to marijuana is merely an indication
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    of an underlying disorder.
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    In all likelihood, marijuana’s role
    varies from person to person.
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    At any age, as with many other drugs,
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    the brain and body
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    become less sensitive
    to marijuana after repeated uses,
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    meaning it takes more
    to achieve the same effects.
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    Fortunately, unlike many other drugs,
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    there’s no risk of fatal overdose
    from marijuana,
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    and even heavy use
    doesn’t lead to debilitating
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    or life-threatening
    withdrawal symptoms if use stops.
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    There are more subtle forms
    of marijuana withdrawal, though,
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    including sleep disturbances,
    irritability, and depressed mood,
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    which pass
    within a few weeks of stopping use.
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    So is marijuana bad for your brain?
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    It depends who you are.
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    But while some risk factors
    are easy to identify,
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    others aren’t well understood—
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    which means there’s still some possibility
    of experiencing negative effects,
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    even if you don’t have
    any of the known risk factors.
Title:
Is marijuana bad for your brain? - Anees Bahji
Speaker:
Anees Bahji
Description:

View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/is-marijuana-bad-for-your-brain-anees-bahji

In 1970, marijuana was classified as a schedule 1 drug in the United States: the strictest designation possible, meaning it was completely illegal and had no recognized medical uses. Today, marijuana's therapeutic benefits are widely acknowledged, but a growing recognition for its medical value doesn't answer the question: is recreational marijuana use bad for your brain? Anees Bahji investigates.

Lesson by Anees Bahji, directed by Anton Bogaty.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
06:21
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