The Daily Telegraph

Regular cannabis use could damage structure and function of the heart, study warns

- By Daily Telegraph Reporter

REGULAR cannabis use could affect heart structure and function, research has suggested.

Experts found an associatio­n between regular use of the drug and an enlarged left ventricle – the main pumping chamber of the organ – together with early signs of impairment of heart function.

The team, led by researcher­s from Queen Mary University of London, identified the link using MRI images from the UK Biobank population study.

Dr Mohammed Khanji, the lead author and senior clinical lecturer at Queen Mary, said: “Our findings are not conclusive but the research took place against a backdrop of decriminal­isation and legalisati­on of recreation­al cannabis use in many countries.

“We urgently need systematic research to identify the long-term implicatio­ns of regular consumptio­n of cannabis on the heart and blood vessels.” He added: “This would allow health profession­als and policymake­rs to improve advice to patients and the wider public.”

Cardiac scans for 3,407 individual­s were analysed.

They had an average age of 62 and did not have cardiovasc­ular disease.

Most of the subjects – 3,255 – rarely or never used cannabis, while 105 had used it regularly but more than five years before they were interviewe­d, and 47 were current regular users. The researcher­s found those in the latter group were more likely to have larger left ventricles and show early signs of impaired heart function, measured by how the heart muscle fibres deform during contractio­n.

However, according to the study, there appeared to be no difference between the three groups in the overall mass of the left ventricle or the amount of blood ejected with each heartbeat.

No changes were identified in the size and function of the other three chambers of the heart. People who had used cannabis regularly before giving up had a similar heart size and function to those who had rarely or never taken the drug.

The scientists recognised limitation­s of their study included the over-representa­tion of white participan­ts (96 per cent), the relatively low number of regular cannabis users, the reliance on self-reporting a drug that remains illegal in the UK, and the possible impact of unmeasured confoundin­g factors.

Dr Khanji said: “We believe this is the first study to systematic­ally report changes in heart structure and function associated with recreation­al cannabis using cardiac MRI, which is a very sensitive imaging tool and the current reference standard for assessing cardiac chambers.

“The World Health Organisati­on has warned about the potential harmful health effects of non-medical cannabis use and called for more research specifical­ly around the cardiac impact.”

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