cannabis and lung disease
Last reviewed 01/2018
- gaseous and the particulate phases of tobacco and cannabis smoke contain
a similar range of harmful chemicals
- however, differing patterns of inhalation mean that smoking a 'joint' of cannabis results in exposure to significantly greater amounts of combusted material than with a tobacco cigarette
- histopathological effects of cannabis smoke exposure include changes consistent with acute and chronic bronchitis
- cellular dysplasia has also been observed, suggesting that, like tobacco smoke, cannabis exposure has the potential to cause malignancy
- symptoms of cough and early morning sputum production are common (20-25%) even in young individuals who smoke cannabis alone
- almost all studies indicate that the effects of cannabis and tobacco smoking are additive and independent
- in 2002, the British Lung Foundation published a report entitled Cannabis — a smoking gun? In summary, this report found that three or four cannabis cigarettes a day are associated with the same evidence of acute and chronic bronchitis and the same degree of damage to the bronchial mucosa as 20 or more tobacco cigarettes a day
- cannabis smoking is associated with bullous lung disease in young
people - it has also been noted that (2):
- inflammatory lung changes, chronic cough, and chest infections are similar to those in cigarette smokers, but may also be commoner in younger people
- premalignant changes have been shown in the pulmonary epithelium, and there are reports of lung, tongue, and other cancers in cannabis smokers
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