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Lifestyle, Research

TRUTH OR TRASH: Study Finds Smoking Cannabis May Make You Age Faster

Chane Leigh

by Chane Leigh

April 18, 2022 03:00 pm ET Estimated Read Time: 6 Minutes
TRUTH OR TRASH: Study Finds Smoking Cannabis May Make You Age Faster

With the many medical benefits of cannabis and its ability to help balance the body’s endocannabinoid system, many might expect its use to prolong life expectancy. In fact, some people specifically use cannabis to age well. But a recent epigenetic study concluded that using cannabis makes one age faster, contradicting a lot of what we know about the plant. Was the study manipulated to be used as a fearmongering tool, or does cannabis actually contribute to aging? Let’s find out.

What Is an Epigenetic Study?

Epigenetics is described as “the study of how cells control gene activity without changing the DNA sequence.” Conrad Waddington explains that epigenetics is a branch of biology “which studies the causal interactions between genes and their products, which bring the phenotype into being.” Therefore, an epigenetic study seeks to understand and define changes in gene function that can occur—such as aging faster. 

The Argument in Favor of Cannabis Causing Faster Aging

According to the 2022 study published in the journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence, researchers found that smoking cannabis accelerates the biological aging process due to the inhalation of hydrocarbons in marijuana smoke. By the time regular smokers were 30 years old, they were displaying genetic ATT activation associated with those beyond their age. The team examined the epigenomes of 154 people based in America.

The manner in which one ages is dependent on a host of variables that can cause changes in gene function, speeding up or slowing down the aging process. The researchers decided to make use of a tool known as “epigenetic clocks” in order to understand whether smoking cannabis accelerates or decreases the aging process.

The study was conducted over a period of 17 years and the results displayed, as reported, “a clear correlation between pot smoking and accelerated epigenetic aging, with heavier users displaying the greatest quickening of their biological clocks.” In order to get the most accurate results, the team controlled for factors such as cigarette smoking, prior health problems, socioeconomic background, personality traits, and history of depression and anxiety. 

While their conclusion of the correlation can be alarming, there are some considerations that give pause to the findings. For example, the study reports a definitive correlation between accelerated aging and lifetime cannabis use. But the team recruited participants at the age of 13 and, if the study ran for 17 years, they would have only been 30 at the time of the study’s conclusion. This is hardly reflective of the lifetime cannabis consumption that they claim contributed to accelerated aging. 

The researchers also went on to say that they “cannot conclusively establish a causal role of marijuana use in epigenetic aging.” Further contributing to the contradiction of their own conclusion is the fact that the study states that “the actual act of smoking” is the primary cause of aging. If smoking is the main concern, the team should have also investigated the many other ways cannabis can be consumed to determine if cannabis or smoking was more so to blame. 

Fortunately, the researchers did find that the accelerated aging effects faded as cannabis use became more distant in the past.

The Argument in Favor of Cannabis Reversing Aging

Cannabis can be used to improve aging by, for example, assisting with menopause and reversing aging in the brain. A study from the University of Bonn explains that memory performance decreases with age and that cannabis can be used to reverse this. The researchers conducted a study on mice and found that they were “able to regress to the state of two-month-old mice with a prolonged low-dose treatment with a cannabis active ingredient.” 

Unfortunately, research on cannabis and aging remains limited but its benefits for aging can be seen through existing research on medical conditions associated with getting older. A study by Yuval Zolotov and Staci Gruber from 2021 explains that “cannabis and cannabinoids may potentially alleviate a wide array of medical conditions that are prevalent among older adults including pain, arthritis, insomnia, anxiety and others.”

Zolotov and Gruber reviewed an epidemiological survey, which found that older medical and non-medical cannabis users did not differ much on measures of physical or behavioral health status but that older persons suffer from more chronic conditions. Many of these chronic conditions can benefit from medicinal cannabis, which supports the use of cannabis for aging. 

Another study from 2020 explains that cannabis appears to be able to improve functioning in older subjects, as seen by mice who received a single injection of ultra-low-dose THC. The report explains that the research available is too sparse to make any definitive claims about cannabis on aging, especially when considering the fact that there is a “mismatch between preclinical and clinical studies.”

To further the point that cannabis needs to be further investigated in this regard, the researchers explain that “cannabis use induces a decrease in acetylcholine levels that leads to memory impairment, while cannabis upregulates the basal level of norepinephrine that leads to memory improvement.”

The researchers from this study also found evidence that cannabis demonstrated protective effects in the hippocampal structure and potential procognitive results “owing to long-term use of low-dose cannabis in the aging brain” but pointed out that there is also research to the contrary. They go on to explain that the interactions between cannabis and aging are complex, but cannabis has shown to alleviate functional loss in aging “under controlled usage.” 

The Final Verdict

Unfortunately, a definitive verdict on the matter of cannabis and aging is difficult to present. Comparing some of the studies covered in this post is like comparing apples to oranges, and the truth is that both sides may hold some truth. Cannabis may decrease aging in the sense of epigenetics, but it may improve aging in terms of dealing with chronic conditions, improving memory, and acting as a neuroprotectant.

A study published in Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience explains that the answer may lie in the fact that cannabis appears to affect individuals in “an age-dependent fashion, having generally beneficial effects on older animals and deleterious effects on younger ones.” This, however, is nothing new, as medical professionals have long known that cannabis is not ideal for minors due to their developing brains. 

What is clear among both arguments is that frequent cannabis use, especially of higher doses and potency, can lead to more adverse effects than one would desire. Until we know more about cannabis from controlled clinical trials, always be responsible with your cannabis use and consider exploring consumption methods beyond smoking. 

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