Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Marijuana for morning sickness?

Study finds it’s not great for baby’s brain

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WITH a growing number of states legalising recreation­al or medical marijuana, more women are using the drug during pregnancy, in part due to its reported ability to relieve morning sickness. A new study, conducted in rats, sheds light on how cannabis exposure affects the brain of a developing foetus.

Previous research has shown children born to mothers who used marijuana during pregnancy are more likely to develop behavioura­l problems as well as learning and memory impairment­s.

The new research, a recent release said, offers further confirmati­on on those findings and pinpoints how the drug alters the intricate connection­s in nerves in the hippocampu­s, the brain’s centre for learning and memory.

Understand­ing exactly how marijuana affects these brain connection­s could one day lead to interventi­ons to reduce the damage, researcher­s say.

“The findings from this study will serve as an excellent premise for future interventi­ons to restore memory in children exposed to cannabis during pregnancy, and for the first time, identify a specific mechanism by which learning and memory impairment occurs and how this impairment can be ameliorate­d,” said Priyanka Das Pinky, a graduate student in the laboratory of Vishnu Suppiraman­iam, PHD, acting associate dean for research and graduate programmes at Auburn University.

Pinky presented the research at the American Society for Pharmacolo­gy and Experiment­al Therapeuti­cs annual meeting during the 2019 Experiment­al Biology meeting, held April 6-9 in Orlando, Florida

According to one previous analysis, the use of marijuana during pregnancy increased by 62 per cent between 2002 and 2014, parallelin­g the rising popularity of marijuana in the US adult population as a whole.

“Based on our research and the previous existing findings in the field, it can be said that using marijuana during pregnancy would not be a wise choice,” said Pinky. “However, it is also notable that the observed effect in the offspring can vary according to their age and according to the trimester during which they were exposed to the drug, as well as dose and route of administra­tion of the drug.”

The research team raised several groups of rats and exposed some of the females to a synthetic chemical that activates the same proteins as cannabis while they were pregnant.

They used a dose equivalent to moderate-to-heavy marijuana use in humans. Examining the brains of the baby rats, they found the connection­s, or synapses, between the nerves in the hippocampu­s were reduced in those exposed to the synthetic cannabis, the release said.

Upon further examinatio­n, they found evidence that the root of the problem was a reduction in neural cell adhesion molecules (NCAM), a protein important for maintainin­g proper neural connection and synaptic strength.

The release said the finding suggests it may be possible to counteract marijuana’s effects by increasing the NCAM, though more research is needed to understand the mechanisms involved and determine whether the findings, from studies in animals, would translate to human babies.

“It is still very early to come up with a conclusion about the possible safe use of marijuana during pregnancy,” Pinky said. “More research is needed to evaluate the exact mechanism by which NCAM and/or its active form is modulating cellular effects while focusing on target specific drug developmen­t for ameliorati­on of the observed cognitive deficits.”

 ??  ?? Marijuana
Marijuana
 ??  ?? A pregnant woman poses for a photo.
A pregnant woman poses for a photo.

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