The Denver Post

Doctors link pot to boy’s death

- By John Ingold

An 11- month- old Colorado boy’s death from a heart condition was probably related to ingestion of marijuana, two Denver doctors have concluded, but the precise link remains unclear.

The boy’s death was first reported in a study published last year about kids’ emergency room visits following marijuana legalizati­on. The boy, whowas not identified in that study, arrived at the hospital unresponsi­ve and with a rapid heart beat, and he later went into cardiac arrest and died. He had no known history of health problems.

The boy tested positive for THC, the psychoacti­ve compound in marijuana. But, at the time, the researcher on the original study said hewas unsure whether that was related to the boy’s death.

But, in a new case report published this year, two doctors from the Rocky Mountain Poison and Drug Center reveal more informatio­n about the boy’s death, while drawing a more direct line between his heart condition and the THC in his system.

“As of this writing, this is the first reported pediatric death associated with cannabis exposure,” the authors, Drs. Thomas Nappe and Christoper Hoyte, write in the case report. The report was published online in March in a journal connected to the Western Journal of EmergencyM­edicine.

Marijuana, though, was not the boy’s cause of death. Instead, the boy died from myocarditi­s — an inflammati­on of the heart muscle.

Previous studies have linked heart problems in young people to heavy cannabis use. There have been reports in Europe of adults who have died of heart conditions after using marijuana. But researcher­s are still unsure exactly how marijuana would cause heart problems.

In the new case report, the authors never refer to the boy’s death as an overdose, and many of the details surroundin­g the death are still murky.

For instance, the doctors noted that the boy had been living in a motel and that a parent had admitted to drug possession, including cannabis. But the doctors noted no report of the boy actually ingesting cannabis. They instead wrote that itwas unlikely— given the level of THC in the boy’s system— that he had merely been exposed to marijuana in passing.

The doctors could not say how much marijuana the boy likely ingested. They also could not pinpoint when the ingestion occurred, giving only a probable time frame of two to six days prior to his death. Lastly, they added that inconsiste­nt blood test results meant there was a slight chance that the myocarditi­s may have been developing silently prior to the marijuana ingestion.

But, after ruling out multiple other causes of myocarditi­s, the doctors concluded that marijuana was the most likely cause of the heart condition. That finding, they argued, should be a warning to both doctors and to parents.

“In states where cannabis is legalized,” they wrote in the case report, “it is important that physicians not only counsel parents on preventing exposure to cannabis, but to also consider cannabis toxicity in unexplaine­d pediatric myocarditi­s and cardiac deaths.”

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