Speaking of Psychology - Marijuana: The brain changer (SOP16)
Episode Date: October 14, 2014Teenagers and young adults who use marijuana regularly are at risk of significantly altering the structure of their brains, according to research by neuropsychologist Krista Lisdahl, PhD. In this epis...ode, she discusses what this means for parents, youths and policymakers considering legalizing recreational and medicinal marijuana. APA is currently seeking proposals for APA 2020, click here to learn more https://convention.apa.org/proposals Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The number of adolescents and young adults using marijuana on a regular basis is increasing,
and some states are legalizing recreational marijuana.
But regulating its use among young people is a challenge that needs to be considered in light of scientific research,
says neuropsychologist Krista Lizdahl.
In this episode, she talks about why chronic marijuana use is especially toxic to teenagers' brains,
even more so now than a few decades ago.
I'm Audrey Hamilton, and this is speaking of it.
psychology. Psychologist Krista Lizdahl is director of the brain imaging and
neuropsychology laboratory at the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. Using magnetic
resonance imaging or MRI, she studies the neurocognitive consequences of
chronic drug use on the brains of teenagers and young adults. Welcome Dr. Lizdahl.
Thank you. It's a pleasure to be here. Years ago there was a television public
service announcement aimed at teenagers that showed an egg frying in a pen. You remember
that? And announcer saying this is your brain on drugs. Very
dramatic. It was memorable to a lot of kids of that generation. Do you think people, specifically
teenagers, really understand what marijuana you specifically can do to their brains? And is it
increasing among teenagers? So for the first question, do they understand what it really does to the
brain? I would have to say for the vast majority, no, there's not a good understanding. In fact, a lot
of people that I talk to, it seems like they don't even understand the concept that marijuana is a drug
that gets in the brain, and that's where the effects come from.
A lot of times the attitude is that, you know, marijuana is just an herb, why would it affect
you?
It's safe as though it's something like mint, you know, it's not a psychoactive drug.
The other question is, is marijuana use increasing among teens?
We have seen an increase, actually, specifically in heavy regular use, which is most
alarming to me because that's when we see more of the negative health effects.
So since we've had the highest rates since the 1980s, in the last five years or so, it's gone up from about 2% of high school seniors using daily all the way up to almost 7%.
Daily.
Daily.
Wow.
And so there's more teenagers using marijuana daily than they are using alcohol daily.
And about 23% of high school seniors are using in the past month.
And that's now surpassed nicotine use.
And so it's second only to alcohol.
Many jurisdictions amongst all this are considering decriminalizing marijuana, not just medical marijuana, but recreational marijuana.
What sort of information should policymakers have when they consider making this drug available to the general public?
Some of the things that I've thought about in weighing the policy issues is the first question we need to ask is,
is the current policy working in reducing marijuana use?
Well, already we see that attitudes relating to marijuana have gotten softer and people,
for the most part, including teenagers, don't see it as very dangerous.
And when we see those attitude shift, we see marijuana use go up.
And so in some ways, this is not even tied to policy changes.
It's more about just the kind of the culture and belief system surrounding marijuana.
And so in the states that have kind of looser beliefs about marijuana or believe it
safer are more likely to pass the legislation for medical marijuana or decriminalization or even
legalization.
So that's one question is, is it actually one?
working our current prohibition policy. And a lot of people would say it's not, it is somewhat
effective at reducing use, but right now we see use going up either way with at least the majority
of the state still having prohibition. The other question that people have to consider when making
these decisions is, is the current policy potentially doing harm? And we do see that with the Bureau of
Justice Statistics about 250,000 adults being arrested for possession charges of marijuana, this does
cost a lot of money. One of the bigger concerns brought up by some of my colleagues, including
people like Dr. Carl Hart, is that there's a very large racial bias in this. So African Americans
are four times more likely throughout the country to be arrested compared to Caucasians.
And federally, Hispanics are more likely to be arrested. They also get more severe sentencing.
And so one thing to balance out is, is prohibition doing harm? And so there is an argument
that it is doing some harm as far as racial discrimination in arrests and sentencing.
And so then the question is, what are the alternatives?
So a lot of people have come out to support decriminalization,
and one of the strengths of that is that it gets rid of some of this criminal justice issue
and the cost of putting people in prisons.
America has more people in prisons than any other country.
This isn't my specialty, but it's clearly an issue that needs to be addressed.
more on the public health side that is my specialty is if jurisdictions consider either decriminalization
and especially legalization, they have to really get ahead of the legislation and before they even
put it into place, consider how are they going to prevent adolescent and emerging adult,
so youth use, how are they going to prevent that, how are they going to get it on the people who need
treatment, how well are they going to fund prevention and treatment?
And then there's other things like how are you going to limit advertising? How are you going to limit
potency? How are you going to make sure that the marijuana is clean and doesn't have other things like
mold in it? So what are some of the major changes happening in the brains of chronic marijuana users
and how do they affect their mental abilities? Yeah, so my area is neuropsychology and neuroimaging
and I've spent the last 15 years or so studying how chronic regular use.
So the first thing is I need to define that.
So that's at least weekly use all the way up to multiple times a day.
And what we see is the bigger effects in cognition are in younger people.
One of the reasons we think this is happening is that the adolescent brain isn't mature
until about the mid-20s.
There's a lot of neurodevelopment going on in the connectivity, in the structure of the brain.
that really doesn't peak about age 25.
Now, people start using drugs around age 16, 17 on average.
It's not an adult onset.
The peak use is in teenage years and young adult years.
And if you start using before age 18, you're at double the risk for developing a use disorder.
And so I consider addiction a teenage onset disorder.
And so I've looked at how chronic marijuana, repeated marijuana use,
these brains. And we do see significant changes in verbal memory, the ability to control impulses,
decision-making, the ability to kind of hold information in mind and manipulate it, the ability to
sustain your attention over time. And the other thing that we see is increased mood symptoms,
including depression and anxiety, and also increased problems with sleep. Now, a lot of these
things get better if people stop using. And in fact, we have evidence that.
that if teenagers stop using for at least a month, we see that their sleep quality improves,
and we also see that some of the cognitive functioning improves, although not all of it.
And there is a longitudinal study showing that if you start before 18, again, using regularly,
not just a couple times, but at least once a week, that we see the biggest drop in IQ,
eight points IQ loss. That's very significant.
And the people who used in their teens never as adults, even though they didn't use,
as adulthood never got back on the trajectory you would have predicted. Now that
study is by Meyer and colleagues. One problem with it is that in the end it was a
pretty small sample size of the teenage regular use onset. And so when you're
thinking policy it's not just the heavy users although they drive the
majority of the market and that's why I'm concerned and everyone's talking
about adults but frankly people start using in their teens and
the heaviest users are in their teens and young adults. So if we change adult policy,
we really need to make sure that we have all the safeguards in place to protect use in teens.
And I want parents and teachers and physicians to start taking marijuana use seriously and young
people and really educate them that if they use regularly, they may be changing the structure
of their brain and they may not reach their full potential.
Now, tetrahydro-canabinol commonly called THC, I'm glad I got that out of my system, is the major psychoactive chemical in marijuana.
Why is it important to consider the potency of these drugs?
It's a really great question.
What we've seen over the past 20 years or so is that the average THC content in marijuana joints was about 5, 6, 7%.
It is now up to 15 to 18%.
And they're also making products where basically they're burning oils down and purifying them down to almost 28% THC.
Now, it's possible that people could be smoking a joint with high THC content and just inhale less to kind of control that dose, although we need more evidence that that's what they're actually doing.
The other problem of this, though, is that as they're kind of creating these strains with really high
THC, what's happened is another component of marijuana called cannabidiol is going down. And what we know
is cannabodial actually has opposing effects to THC in the brain. And it seems to be neuroprotective.
It actually reduces anxiety. And there are some human studies that show if someone is smoking
marijuana with high content of cannibalial, then they have fewer cognitive effects, both while
they're smoking and then a few days later. We need more evidence to figure out, like, what is the
safer ratio of THC versus cannabis dial? But this is something that a lot of government agencies
are really considering. So, for example, the Netherlands are thinking about capping the THC levels
at 15 percent, and other folks like myself are really trying to push them to also consider
increasing the minimum requirement of cannibial. What about medical marijuana? Does that have a high
THC count or is that regulated at all? It is there's different strains. You know, people basically
sell and market these different strains. Some of them have very high THC content. Some of them have very
low. There are some strains that are marketed as, as really high cannabodial, like Charlotte's Web, for example.
although, you know, these aren't regulated.
Right.
And it's hard.
Science hasn't exactly gotten on board to test all of these and to look at the
psychopharmacology.
There are clinical trials that control the levels of THC and cannabodial.
And I actually really strongly support that as far as the medicinal side goes, that science
and medicine lead the way in this.
And we do clinical trials just like any other medication and that we don't, you know, have
parents out there.
trying to pick different cannabinoid oils and things like that for their children when there's
really very little evidence to back it on safety profiles and the therapeutic dose. So we really,
we need more research and we need to get ahead of that. I actually think it's slightly ridiculous
that we just have people smoking pot that they get from growers as a medicine.
Now, many people are under the assumption that marijuana is not addictive. You can't be
addicted to it. It's just not like alcohol, it's not like cigarettes, but so is it? There's actually
very strong evidence that marijuana is addictive and any, pretty much any scientists that are talking
about policy, no one denies that it's addictive. What we see in the general adult population is of
those who use marijuana, 9% show a cannabis use disorder. So problems related and signs of addiction.
What we see in teenagers, however, is if you start smoking before, say,
the rate is closer to 18% rates of addiction.
And actually, if you start smoking in the more like 14, 15, you have even higher rates like 25% who try it become addicted.
So there are these sensitive periods where you're more likely to develop a cannabis use disorder.
With that said, people always like to put this within context.
Alcohol is more addictive.
Nicotine is the most addictive, about three quarters of the people who try and
nicotine become addictive. But it's similar to other drugs that are legal, slightly less
addictive than alcohol and nicotine. Are there risk factors for, you know, who may become more
addicted, especially among teenagers? One of them is having comorbid psychiatric disorders.
So individuals with the diagnosis, for example, of schizophrenia or depression may have more
problems related to their cannabis use and thus more likely to develop cannabis use disorders.
There's also an African American and Hispanic adolescents and young adults if they have a lot of
arrests in their past. And this is where the criminal justice part of it comes in and that might
actually getting rid of some of those criminal justice components might actually be protective
against developing problems. Some other risk factors are being very impulsive.
Being someone who's sensation seeking, you may be more likely to try something like marijuana.
But sensation seekers actually think about the consequences.
The difference is if you're impulsive, you try something, you don't really think about the consequences,
and those folks are more likely to develop dependence and use disorders.
Thankfully, the majority of teenagers don't become dependents.
There's a huge segment, at least half, that don't even try marijuana or really other drugs.
We are trying to really figure out what puts someone on the track of trying it, that kind of first stage and really enjoying it and it being really rewarding, and then going on and using it regularly, therefore kind of changing the structure of the brain and sensitizing the brain to the drug and then using compulsively and really showing a cannabis use disorder.
And so there are some longitudinal studies right now really trying to figure that out.
So what predicts what trajectory you get on?
And also what's so protective?
We know that parental involvement, community norms that say that cannabis is harmful,
help reduce the likelihood of you using, and also being involved with a lot of other activities,
especially physical activities and also religious activities are protective.
Great. Well, thank you, Dr. Liz Doll for joining us. Thank you.
For more information on marijuana use and teens, visit our website at speakingofpsychology.org.
With the American Psychological Association, speaking of psychology, I'm Audrey Hamilton.
