Pubdate: Thu, 03 Nov 2005
Source: Excalibur (CN ON Edu)
Copyright: 2005 Excalibur
Contact:  http://www.excal.on.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3147
Author: Juanita King, Candian University Press

STUDY FINDS MARIJUANA ANTI-DEPRESSANT

The Blunt Truth: Drug Increases Brain Cell Growth

ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. (CUP) - Supporters of marijuana may finally have an
excuse to smoke weed every day, as a recent study in the Journal Of
Clinical Investigation suggests that smoking pot can make the brain
grow.

Though most drugs inhibit the growth of new brain cells, injections of
a synthetic cannibinoid have had the opposite effect in mice in a
study performed at the University of Saskatchewan. Research on how
drugs affect the brain has been critical to addiction treatment,
particularly research on the hippocampus.

The hippocampus is an area of the brain essential to memory formation.
It is unusual because it grows new neurons over a person's lifetime.
Researchers believe these new cells help to improve memory and fight
depression and mood disorders.

Many drugs - heroin, cocaine and the more common alcohol and nicotine
- - inhibit the growth of these new cells. It was thought that marijuana
did the same thing, but new research suggests otherwise.

Neuropsychiatrist, Xia Zhang and a team of researchers study how
marijuana-like drugs, known collectively as cannabinoids,  act on the
brain.

The team tested the effects of HU-210, a potent synthetic cannabinoid
similar to a group of compounds found in marijuana. The synthetic
version is about 100 times as powerful as Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC),
the high-inducing compound loved by recreational users.

The researchers found that rats treated with HU-210 on a regular basis
showed neurogenesis - the growth of new brain cells in the
hippocampus. A current hypothesis suggests depression may be triggered
when the hippocampus grows insufficient numbers of new brain cells. If
true, HU-210 could offer a treatment for such mood disorders by
stimulating this growth.

Whether this is true for all cannabinoids remains unclear, as HU-210
is only one of many and the HU-210 in the study is highly purified.

"That does not mean that general use in healthy people is beneficial,"
said Memorial University of Newfoundland psychology professor William
McKim. "We need to learn if this happens in humans, whether this is
useful in healthy people and whether THC causes it as well."

McKim warns that marijuana disrupts memory and cognition. "These
effects can be long-lasting after heavy use," he said. "This makes it
difficult to succeed academically if you use it excessively."

"Occasional light use probably does not have very serious
consequences. [But], there is some evidence that marijuana smoke might
cause cancer," he cautioned.

Still, the positive aspects of marijuana are becoming more plentiful
as further research is done. McKim says it's not surprising that THC
and compounds like it could have medicinal effects.

"Many have been identified," he said. "It stimulates appetite in
people with AIDS, it is an analgesic and blocks nausea in cancer
patients undergoing chemotherapy and it treats the symptoms of glaucoma."

The research group's next studies will examine the more unpleasant
side of the drug. 
- ---
MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFlorida)