Tobacco, but not pot,
boosts early stroke risk
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[January 04, 2017]
By Anne Harding
(Reuters Health) - Smoking pot in young
adulthood does not seem to increase the risk of early stroke, but
cigarette smoking does, according to a study of nearly 50,000 Swedish
military conscripts.
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“Extensive tobacco smokers in late adolescence had a fivefold
increased risk of stroke before age 45, when compared to
non-smokers, and more than double the risk of stroke (up through)
age 60,” study author Dr. Anna-Karin Danielsson of Karolinska
Institutet in Stockholm told Reuters Health via email.
More than 90 percent of stroke risk is related to tobacco smoking,
alcohol consumption and other modifiable risk factors, Danielsson
and her team note in their report in Stroke. New evidence has
suggested that marijuana may also increase stroke risk, they add,
especially for strokes occurring before age 45.
To look for a link between cannabis and stroke, the researchers
looked at data on 49,321 men born from 1949 to 951 who were drafted
into military service at ages 18 to 20.
Over the next 60 years, there were 1,037 first time strokes, about
half due to blood-vessel blockages and about a quarter due to
bleeding. There were 192 first-time strokes among men under age 45.
Overall, after taking other risk factors into account, the
researchers found that using pot more than 50 times was not
associated with an increased risk of stroke at age 45 or younger.
Pot users did have a two-fold higher risk of stroke due to
blood-vessel blockage, but the link was weakened after the
researchers accounted for participants’ tobacco use.
Men who smoked at least 20 cigarettes a day, however, were at five
times the risk of stroke before age 45, and more than two times the
risk by age 60.
“The almost doubled risk of ischemic stroke following heavy cannabis
use that was observed in our study disappeared when we controlled
for tobacco smoking,” Danielsson said.
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But, she added, the fact that almost all the pot smokers were also
tobacco smokers makes it hard “to rule out possible associations
between cannabis and stroke.”
“Further studies examining the possible health effects of cannabis
are needed,” she said. “For one thing, we need to be able to control
for the effects of tobacco smoking.
Nine states have legalized recreational marijuana use, and 28 states
have legalized it for medicinal purposes.
The National Institute on Drug Abuse says marijuana is tied to some
negative health outcomes beyond the mental effects the drug is known
for. Those outcomes include possible breathing problems, increased
heart rates and possible long-term cognition problems among young
users. (http://bit.ly/2iAEGzZ)
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2hsSEVH Stroke, online December 27, 2016.
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