Cannabis
Related: About this forumAMA: Marijuana doesn't impact brain function
Working memory, which refers to the amount of information that is stored in the brain and used to execute cognitive tasks, has long been associated with being hindered by cannabis use. This makes the results of the study all the more surprising and could be the catalyst for a better understanding of how cannabis impacts brain health.
The study, which was funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse and published in the journal JAMA Network Open, focused primarily on moderate cannabis consumption for medical symptoms. To conduct the study, 57 recently certified medical patients were observed via functional magnetic resonance imaging as a means to monitor the brain during tasks. After one year of cannabis consumption, researchers scanned the brains of the study participants to see how brain function had changed.
After year-long cannabis use for medical symptoms, we did not observe functional differences during working memory, reward processing or inhibitory control tasks, or an association of changes in cannabis use frequency with brain activation. Similarly, no significant changes in behavioral performance emerged, the study found.
https://www.tucsonweekly.com/tucson/ama-marijuana-doesnt-impact-brain-function/Content?oid=36159969
brush
(57,227 posts)time and again?
Pot gives one the munchies and tends to lessen aggression/makes on peaceful.
Perhaps we should drop pallet loads of the best stuff over in the ME.
Betty Boom
(173 posts)Anecdotal and non-case controlled studies arent worth shit. I dont care how much you think you know about cannabis, until there is legitimate research done, sensible legislation, and approval for wider spread medicinal use will never happen. Not to mention federal approval. Translation: insurance coverage.
For years, NIDA could not fund cannabis research. And leadership was opposed to legalization. The more that you can show the medical community that cannabis does minimal harm, the more they will be willing to prescribe and see it as a viable option. That includes medical school training, which is non-existent now.
This is great news
Danascot
(4,884 posts)I'm in big trouble.