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Marijuana Causes Cancer? - Help

4EverTweakin

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I was doing some leisure reading, and came across this:

http://www.howstuffworks.com/marijuana.htm

Additionally, marijuana affects motor coordination, increases your heart rate and raises levels of anxiety. Studies also show that marijuana contains cancer-causing chemicals typically associated with cigarettes.


Is this true? Can someone elaborate on which types of cancer. I had seen several post and links showing some time ago they had proven it didn't cause lung cancer, but I'm also curious as to what cancer-causing chemicals in marijuana are also present in cigarettes?

Am I misreading? Misinformed? After all, it is a single source. I guess I am a little surprised to read this, but that's why I'm asking for some clarity. I have never read otherwise, but I must have associated the lung cancer with all for whatever - stoned out-nodding - state I was in at the time I read it. Help?
 
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Yeah, Cannabis does have carcinogens in it. Your burning a plant, what do you expect? On the other hand, its got no where near as many carcinogens in it, and THC is an anti-carcinogen.


They say it MAY, or SHOULD cause cancer, but in reality they haven't been able to find us one case of cancer in any shape or form linked to only Cannabis. Its the fact that many people mix their bud with tobacco which makes the cancer causing/addictive. The government just jumps on this and claims only Cannabis does this.

I've actually read somewhere than smoking weed actually lessens your chance to get Lung Cancer, as long as your smoking pure green.

Do the right thing, go green. ;)
 
such a conspiracy!

Study: Smoking Marijuana Does Not Raise Lung Cancer Risk

By Lisa Fayed, About.com

Updated: May 24, 2006

About.com Health's Disease and Condition content is reviewed by our Medical Review Board


Question: Study: Smoking Marijuana Does Not Raise Lung Cancer Risk

I heard that smoking marijuana will not cause lung cancer. Is this true? Does smoking marijuana increase my risk for lung cancer?

Answer: According to a recent study by the University of California Los Angeles, there is no increased lung cancer risk in smoking marijuana.

The study presented at the annual American Thoracic Society meeting this week in San Diego, studied the lives of those under 60, since that age group is most to have been exposed to the heaviest amounts of marijuana use.

The "baby boomer" group was comprised of 611 lung cancer patients, 601 head and neck cancer patients and 1040 people who did not have cancer. The study found no increased risk of lung and head and neck cancer. However, it did find a significant increased risk factor in those who smoked two or more packs of cigarettes a day.

The study also suggests that marijuana contains more than 50% more of the chemicals related to lung cancer than cigarettes, its a chemical inside marijuana called THC that may prevent cancer from developing.

THC, or tetrahydrocannabinol, may have the ability to kill damaged cells before they become cancerous.
Is this a green light to smoke marijuana?
Absolutely not. Marijuana still contains chemicals that are harmful to the health. When marijuana is inhaled, it is usually held in for times longer than cigarette smoke, thus allowing tar and other chemicals to be absorbed into the lungs.

Marijuana users face the same respiratory problems as regular smokers, such as bronchitis, wheezing, and general difficulty in breathing.

Plus, the resecrchers of the study do say that a lung cancer risk associated wsith smoking marijuana may be revealed as the baby boomers age.

Last but not least, remember that marijuana is illegal in the U.S. and in most countries worldwide.

References: Seattle Pi: "Pot's low cancer risk a surprise finding"
Columbia University, Health Services at ColumbiaMore Cancer Q&A
~ source

Cannabinoids As Cancer Hope

by Paul Armentano
Senior Policy Analyst
NORML | NORML Foundation

“Cannabinoids possess … anticancer activity [and may] possibly represent a new class of anti-cancer drugs that retard cancer growth, inhibit angiogenesis (the formation of new blood vessels) and the metastatic spreading of cancer cells." So concludes a comprehensive review published in the October 2005 issue of the scientific journal Mini-Reviews in Medicinal Chemistry.

Not familiar with the emerging body of research touting cannabis' ability to stave the spread of certain types of cancers? You're not alone.

For over 30 years, US politicians and bureaucrats have systematically turned a blind eye to scientific research indicating that marijuana may play a role in cancer prevention -- a finding that was first documented in 1974. That year, a research team at the Medical College of Virginia (acting at the behest of the federal government) discovered that cannabis inhibited malignant tumor cell growth in culture and in mice. According to the study's results, reported nationally in an Aug. 18, 1974, Washington Post newspaper feature, administration of marijuana's primary cannabinoid THC, "slowed the growth of lung cancers, breast cancers and a virus-induced leukemia in laboratory mice, and prolonged their lives by as much as 36 percent."

Despite these favorable preclinical findings, US government officials dismissed the study (which was eventually published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute in 1975), and refused to fund any follow-up research until conducting a similar –- though secret –- clinical trial in the mid-1990s. That study, conducted by the US National Toxicology Program to the tune of $2 million concluded that mice and rats administered high doses of THC over long periods experienced greater protection against malignant tumors than untreated controls.

Rather than publicize their findings, government researchers once again shelved the results, which only came to light after a draft copy of its findings were leaked in 1997 to a medical journal, which in turn forwarded the story to the national media.

Nevertheless, in the decade since the completion of the National Toxicology trial, the U.S. government has yet to encourage or fund additional, follow up studies examining the cannabinoids' potential to protect against the spread cancerous tumors.

Fortunately, scientists overseas have generously picked up where US researchers so abruptly left off. In 1998, a research team at Madrid's Complutense University discovered that THC can selectively induce apoptosis (program cell death) in brain tumor cells without negatively impacting the surrounding healthy cells. Then in 2000, they reported in the journal Nature Medicine that injections of synthetic THC eradicated malignant gliomas (brain tumors) in one-third of treated rats, and prolonged life in another third by six weeks.

In 2003, researchers at the University of Milan in Naples, Italy, reported that non-psychoactive compounds in marijuana inhibited the growth of glioma cells in a dose dependent manner and selectively targeted and killed malignant cancer cells.

The following year, researchers reported in the journal of the American Association for Cancer Research that marijuana's constituents inhibited the spread of brain cancer in human tumor biopsies. In a related development, a research team from the University of South Florida further noted that THC can also selectively inhibit the activation and replication of gamma herpes viruses. The viruses, which can lie dormant for years within white blood cells before becoming active and spreading to other cells, are thought to increase one's chances of developing cancers such as Karposis Sarcoma, Burkitts lymphoma, and Hodgkins disease.

More recently, investigators published pre-clinical findings demonstrating that cannabinoids may play a role in inhibiting cell growth of colectoral cancer, skin carcinoma, breast cancer, and prostate cancer, among other conditions. When investigators compared the efficacy of natural cannabinoids to that of a synthetic agonist, THC proved far more beneficial – selectively decreasing the proliferation of malignant cells and inducing apoptosis more rapidly than its synthetic alternative while simultaneously leaving healthy cells unscathed.

Nevertheless, US politicians have been little swayed by these results, and remain steadfastly opposed to the notion of sponsoring – or even acknowledging – this growing body clinical research, preferring instead to promote the unfounded notion that cannabis use causes cancer. Until this bias changes, expect the bulk of research investigating the use of cannabinoids as anticancer agents to remain overseas and, regrettably, overlooked in the public discourse.
~ NORML source


Independent studies in the mid-1970s suggested that cannabinoids inhibited tumor growth in lab mice. [22] In 1979, a study commissioned by the Australian government concluded that cannabis is effective in the treatment of glaucoma, and “of potentially greater significance is the recent finding that THC inhibits the growth of some types of cancer in tissue culture.” [23] Intriguing as they may be, those citations pale in light of investigations by the US government. Ironically, pursuing common prohibitionist rhetoric proved quite perplexing upon analyzing the carcinogenic properties of THC. In the mid-1990s, the US federal government funded a two-year and two-million-dollar study by the National Toxicology Program under the review of the Federal Drug Administration, the National Cancer Institute, and other federal agencies. The study was designed to determine the cancer rate induced by injecting high does of THC in the bodies of mice, then injecting them with cancerous cells. Ironically, the study found that the mice injected with THC had a far lower incidence of cancer than did the control group. Assessing the unpublished draft version, cannabis researcher Donald Abrams summarized, “THC caused fewer tumors and prolonged survival in these laboratory animals.” [24] The deputy director of the National Toxicology Program study concurred, “We found absolutely no evidence of cancer.” The profound implication that cannabis use might actually help prevent cancer has not been officially released to the American public, purportedly because of a lack of personnel.[25], [26] The executive secretary of the Toxicology Program has remarked, “I think it’s terrible the way the government is handling this marijuana issue. There’s no reason this shouldn’t have been published.” [27]

Even without the Toxicology Program study, some leading scientists were already aware of this remarkable potential. Marijuana researcher Leo Hollister has noted the apparent dichotomy of investigations on cannabis and cancer:

The clinical implication of some of these findings is obscure. On the one hand, exposure to smoke from cannabis may be carcinogenic. On the other, the changes in nucleic acid synthesis, were they to be specific for rapidly dividing cells, such as those of malignancies, might be useful therapeutically in their treatment. [28]

The Institute of Medicine report of 1999 failed to address this intriguing potential of cannabinoid medicines in the prevention and treatment of cancer because the National Toxicology Program study had not been officially published. Instead, the popular subject of respiratory cancer figured heavily in the million-dollar report commissioned by the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy. However, the IOM Executive Summary cautiously avoided drawing negative conclusions from the available data:

Although cellular, genetic, and human studies all suggest that marijuana smoke is an important risk factor for the development of respiratory cancer, proof that habitual marijuana smoking does or does not cause cancer awaits the results of well-designed studies. [29]
source
 
Yeah... they say that it has higher amounts of chemicals that cause cancer. BUT, basically everyone is baffled as to why it has never caused a case of cancer.

It should, but doesn't, cause cancer. Emphysema and other lung diseases on the other hand...
 
Yeah... they say that it has higher amounts of chemicals that cause cancer. BUT, basically everyone is baffled as to why it has never caused a case of cancer.

It should, but doesn't, cause cancer. Emphysema and other lung diseases on the other hand...

No, not everyone is baffled. Non-organic American tobacco is grown with a fertilizer that is very good at absorbing natural radon from the atmosphere, which degrades to radioactive polonium-210 in cigarettes. This radioactivity is far more carcinogenic than any chemical produced when a plant is burned.
 
the single greatest cause of any given type of cancer is ignorance. after that, it's radioactive isotopes that mutate cellular DNA and fuck up their programmed death, leading to tumours. while cigarette smokers are at a greater risk since they ritually laden their lungs with more and more radioactive isotopes, those isotopes lurk unseen in air everywhere which means we're breathing them in.

even more unfortunately, that's something the lungs can't expel, meaning you're stuck with whatever you've got decaying in your lungs for the rest of your life and after you die. the only thing you can do about it is to keep your body clean of as many toxins as you can and consume antioxidants that will fuck up those free radicals that cause cancers. as a rule of thumb, the more colourful a vegetable or fruit is, the more packed it is with good ol antioxidants.

you didn't think 'eat your broccolli' was just a crock of shit, didja? ;)
 
if youre really worried about your lungs and health

try a vaporizer
 
If there were any actual cases of marijuana causing cancer, they government would be all over that for their anti-drug propaganda.
 
No, not everyone is baffled. Non-organic American tobacco is grown with a fertilizer that is very good at absorbing natural radon from the atmosphere, which degrades to radioactive polonium-210 in cigarettes. This radioactivity is far more carcinogenic than any chemical produced when a plant is burned.

The articles I read must have been outdated, because they all said they "weren't sure." Excuse me.
 
Smoking anything causes cancer

Qft. If you mix your weed then all the chemicals in tobacco are present plus the papers which can also be pretty detrimental to your health because of bleach and glue and what ever else. I was actually considering trying the Raw Vegan papers to see if it made any real difference to my lungs, not that i suffer any way. If not, im buyng a vape.
 
is it more than cigs?

Good question, I've heard both.

As I understand it, cigs contain more harmful chemicals which can lead to cancer, but marijuana contains much more tar and messes up your lungs more (esp considering the methods of smoking each).

IMO, if you were to smoke 1 joint for every 1 cig you would be feeling the pot a lot more... but I have no idea if that is a linkage to cancer or not.
 
I think the bottom line is you're getting tar in your lungs from smoking, (see all that black stuff in your pipe?) and thats not too good for your health. Granted it's not as bad as lots of other things, certainly ciggarettes, but it's not good for you either. If you're worried about lung cancer try vaporizing.
 
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