[[{“value”:”READ MORE: Dirty habit linked to 20x higher colon cancer death rate

Regularly smoking weed or consuming edibles may raise the risk of suffering a heart attack, a study suggests. 

The team from the University of California San Francisco who made the find warns it is ‘more evidence cannabis use is not benign.’

It also comes amid an alarming rise in unexplained heart attacks in young Americans, which experts are still trying to unpack. 

In the new study, researchers found people who smoked marijuana or took edibles at least three times a week had damage to their blood vessels, which are vital for delivering oxygen and nutrients from the heart to every organ and tissue.

Their blood vessels worked half as well compared to those who never used cannabis. 

This affects the blood vessels ability to dilate, raising the risk of atherosclerosis, heart attacks and strokes. 

While recent studies have linked cannabis smoking to heart disease, the new report is one of the first to show heart damage from edibles containing THC, the psychoactive component of cannabis. 

Matthew Springer, study co-author and professor of medicine at UCSF, told CNN: ‘We’re looking at a window in the future, showing the early changes that may explain why smoking marijuana has been linked to later heart disease.’

About 18million Americans use marijuana daily or nearly every day. 

Cannabis use is also on the rise, largely due to recent decriminalization across the US. From 1992 to 2022, for example, daily and near-daily use has seen a 15-fold rise. 

The study, published this week in JAMA Cardiology, recruited 55 healthy adults ages 18 to 50 who neither smoked tobacco nor vaped. They also were not regularly exposed to secondhand smoke.

They were then sorted into three groups based on chronic cannabis use: using marijuana three times per week for at least a year, consuming at least three THC edibles a week for a year or not using cannabis at all. 

Cannabis users were 30 years old on average while nonusers were 28. 

None of the participants had pre-existing heart conditions.

They found people who smoked marijuana or used edibles at least three times a week performed worse on tests measuring blood vessel function.

Marijuana smokers had a 42 percent reduction in vascular function than controls, while THC edible users had a 52 percent reduction compared to those who never used cannabis. 

This was determined by ultrasound measurements of the arteries in the arm.

Endothelial cells, which line the blood vessels and regulate blood flow, released less nitric oxide in people who regularly smoked marijuana or took edibles.

Nitric oxide helps blood vessels dilate and deliver vital oxygen throughout the body.

This impaired function affects the blood vessels ability to dilate, increasing the risk of atherosclerosis, heart attacks, and strokes.  

Nearly 1million Americans every year die of cardiovascular disease, a group of conditions including coronary artery disease, heart attack and stroke. 

It’s America’s leading cause of death, with cancer and accidental injuries following closest behind. 

Because the average participant in the new study was 30 years old, the study could help explain why young Americans are increasingly suffering heart attacks.

Previous research has suggested the use of drugs like marijuana, as well as conditions like Covid and type 2 diabetes, may be to blame. 

However, the researchers cautioned the study only shows an association between cannabis and heart function and can’t prove direct causation. 

There were several limitations, including the study’s small sample size and the lack of comparison between different strains of cannabis. 

“}]] A dirty habit practiced by 18million Americans may reduce blood vessel function and raise the risk of suffering a heart attack, a study from the University of California San Francisco suggests.  Read More  

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