this is long, but I thought I would post anyway... Seriously people, just go check out erowid. They have all the info you will ever need about pot and every other drug.
The Arkansas Times, September 16, 1993
REEFER MADNESS
While courts send users to prison, scientists at NCTR find little
to support dangers of pot.
POT'S TAB IN THE
WAR ON DRUGS
The investment:
* Federal matching funds for the "war on drugs" in Arkansas
totaled $4.6 million in 1992.
* State and local agencies kicked in another $1.8 million.
* The Arkansas National Guard received $1.3 million to
assist in marijuana eradication.
* An unknown additional amount of money was generated for
drug investigations by the sale of confiscated property.
* No figures are available for the cost of prosecuting drug
cases and incarcerating offenders.
The return:
* 42 percent of all arrests for the sale and manufacture of
drugs in 1992 were for selling or growing marijuana.
* And 62 percent of all arrests for possession of drugs were
for possession of marijuana.
By Mara Leveritt
The monkeys smoked a joint a day.
Actually, they didn't recline in their cages, puffing a
hand-rolled reefer. This being a scientific experiment, funded
by the powerful National Institute on Drug Abuse, the process was
more carefully controlled. The monkeys were fitted with masks
through which marijuana smoke, machine-puffed in carefully
measured doses, was passed into their nostrils.
The experiment, performed at the National Center for
Toxicological Research near Pine Bluff, was designed to test
whether chronic marijuana use caused brain damage. It lasted for
several years, with the most intensive phase, during which
monkeys were exposed to heavy doses of marijuana smoke, occurring
from 1984 to 1985.
Reports on the study's findings continue to be published in
pharmacology and toxicology journals. But beyond those tight
scientific circles, the results of the NCTR experiment, the most
extensive of its kind yet conducted, have gone almost entirely
unnoticed.
That's not surprising, perhaps. In a world where the
political majority has shown little tolerance for marijuana, the
test results are explosive.
The experiment discovered no adverse impact from marijuana
on monkeys' general health, no sign that heavy exposure to
marijuana smoke caused lung cancer, and, with one exception, no
long-term effects on the animals' behavior from exposure to
marijuana.
Before the NCTR study, the largest experiment examining the
effects of marijuana on primates was one conducted at the
Stanford Research Institute. That experiment, focusing on the
brain's electrical activity under the influence of marijuana,
involved 16 monkeys.
By contrast, the experiment at NCTR used 62 monkeys, all
rhesus males. In 1983, the animals were all approximately two to
three years old, the monkey equivalent of teen-agers.
For one year before the start of the experiment, the monkeys
were trained to play "games" designed to test their perception of
the passage of time and their ability to discern left from right.
Only after they were proficient did the exposure to marijuana
begin.
Toxicologists divided the monkeys into four groups. Every
day for a year, 16 monkeys each received what Dr. Merle Paule,
head of NCTR's Behavioral Toxicology Laboratory and Primate
Research Facility, called "a pretty heavy exposure" to marijuana,
the human equivalent, Paule said, of "four or five joints a day."
Another group of 16 smoked the same amount of marijuana, but
only two days per week. Staffers called them the "weekend
smokers."
A third group was administered smoke from cigarettes
identical to the others, except that the psychoactive component
of THC had been removed. And a fourth group received no smoke
exposure at all.
The monkeys smoked for a year, then they were monitored and
tested for another year.
Dr. William Slikker, acting director of NCTR's Division of
Neurotoxicology, explained that the study generated so much data,
it has taken time to compile it and the results have been
released gradually, in several reports since the experiment was
ended.
In 1991, the journal Fundamental and Applied Toxicology
published a report on the effects of marijuana on the monkeys'
general health. Slikker was the lead writer, with Paule
(pronounced Paul) and other NCTR researchers listed as
collaborators.
That report concluded, "The general health of the monkeys
was not compromised by a year of marijuana smoke exposure as
indicated by weight gain, carboxyhemoglobin and clinical
chemistry/hematology values.
"Most clinical parameters ... did not show any treatment-
related changes, and those few that did were of small magnitude,
transient in nature, and were not different at the end of the
five-month postdosing period."
Last week, in his office at NCTR, Paule explained the health
study's results in more casual terms. "There's just nothing
there," he said. "They were all fine."
Last year, the journal Toxicology Letters published a report
by another group of NCTR researchers on the effects of marijuana
on the lungs of the monkeys who smoked. Seven months after the
last exposure to marijuana smoke, some of the monkeys were killed
and their bodies autopsied. Scientists examined the lungs for
signs of disturbances called "carcinogen-DNA adducts," considered
to be one of the early indications of cancer.
The writers of that study reported that although their
findings were not conclusive, they were "at variance with earlier
work suggesting that fractions of marijuana smoke are highly
genotoxic."
The seven authors noted that, "It has been suggested that
marijuana smoking is a proximal cause of respiratory cancer.
However, these intimations have not been borne out by
epidemiological investigations, which is surprising considering
the widespread use of marijuana."
Moreover, the journal article noted: "The data presented
here suggest that seven months after the last smoke exposure,
there is not evidence of increased marijuana smoke-induced
carcinogen-DNA adducts in the lungs of exposed monkeys."
Paule's informal interpretation: "If it's not there, it's
probably not too terrible."
(The researchers discount the claim that as marijuana has
become increasingly potent, due to refined horticultural
techniques, it has also become more dangerous. Other studies,
they say, have demonstrated that smokers inhale only to the point
of inebriation, so that persons smoking stronger marijuana smoke
considerably less of it.)
Late last year, Paule himself was the lead author of a
report published in The Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental
Therapeutics. It dealt with marijuana's effect on behavior.
This report's findings were more complex.
Before the monkeys were started on their year-long smoke
exposure, Slikker, Paule and other scientists, conducted a short-
term study to determine the immediate effect of THC on the
animals; in other words, how they reacted when they were "high."
They found two areas of apparent impact. One was the
monkey's short-term memory. "That's a function that's very
sensitive," Paule explained, "but only on an acute basis. If you
test them the next day, you see no residual effect on those
behaviors."
The monkeys sense of time also appeared disrupted. Monkeys,
it turns out, are as good as humans at estimating the passage of
time. Members of both species to equally well at a test that
requires them, for instance, to press down on a lever for more
than 10 seconds but not longer than 14 seconds.
Marijuana has been shown to affect human's ability to
perform the test at normal levels, and the monkeys were no
different. "That time-estimation behavior is exquisitely
sensitive to marijuana," Paule said, "even at very low doses."
The NCTR study corroborated human studies showing that time
seems to stretch out for many subjects under the influence of
marijuana. In the monkeys' response to the time-perception test,
Paule explained, "what they said was that eight seconds feels
like ten."
That phenomenon too, however, quickly dissipated. Testing
the next day showed the monkeys' time perception restored to its
normal acuity.
The main thrust of the study, however, concerned the long-
term effects of exposure to marijuana. To study that, the
animals were tested for cognitive function and motivation 23
hours after each marijuana exposure.
The cognitive test involved four lights and two levers. The
monkeys were taught that when they saw a red or a yellow light,
they were to hit a lever on their left in order to receive a food
pellet. If a blue or a green light came on, they would get the
pellet by hitting a lever on their right.
The researchers wanted to see if the animals scored any
differently 23 hours after exposure to marijuana than they had
before receiving the drug. "On that test," Paule said, "their
performance was unaffected."
The test of motivation, however, showed a definite pattern
of change. This test required the monkeys to put forth an
increasing amount of effort to get food. Since a decrease in
motivation or "work ethic" has been described as one of the
effects of smoking marijuana, the researchers wanted to see "how
much effort the monkeys were willing to put out," as compared to
the nonsmoking control group.
Their paychecks were banana-flavored food pellets. For the
first pellet, the monkeys had only to depress a lever once. They
had to hit it twice to get the second pellet. And for a third
pellet, they had to pump the lever three times.
Here, the group exposed to THC showed a clear unwillingness
to get worked up about work. Paule pointed out that during the
year the test was being conducted, the monkeys were passing from
adolescence into adulthood, a time for them, as for humans, he
said, when "the work ethic normally goes way up."
But that improvement didn't show up in the marijuana-
smokers. While the nonsmoking monkeys showed a willingness to
work harder and harder as the year progressed, the marijuana
groups stayed at adolescent levels.
"Our interpretation of this is that marijuana smoking in
monkeys does produce something akin to an amotivational
syndrome," Paule said. He added, however, that the phenomenon
may have occurred precisely because the monkeys were at the
critical and deliberately chosen stage of adolescence when the
NCTR test was conducted.
Because marijuana use is high among teenagers, depressed
motivation at that stage in life can have serious effects. But
marijuana may not have the same effect on adults.
"We did a search of the literature," Paule said, "and we
found that those studies that tried to find amotivational
syndrome in adults could not find one. It only appears in
adolescence. Chances are, if we'd done these studies in adults,
we wouldn't have seen this effect. And the good news is that,
even among adolescents, when the exposure to marijuana was
stopped, their motivation jumped right back up to normal levels."
"It took two to three months for them to recover to full
values, but they did recover and they recovered fully."
Paule noted two other findings related to the motivational
test. One was that the willingness to work appeared to be
equally affected in both the daily and weekend smokers. "That
totally surprised us," he said.
Another finding worthy of note was that, as in most areas of
life, one monkey proved to be an exception. As Paule put it, he
seemed to go "blooey" under the influence of marijuana.
"Unlike the others, we found that this one particular animal
was severely disrupted by chronic marijuana exposure on the
discrimination task. And he never recovered full from the
amotivational syndrome. We have no understanding of why.
Everything else about him tested normal."
That one monkey represents a warning. As Paule cautioned,
"There appears to be tremendous individual variation in
susceptibility to marijuana."
Also of interest in the NCTR study, in light of U.S.
criminal sanctions against marijuana, is the researchers'
observation that the animals exposed to marijuana never posed a
threat to their handlers.
"I've never seen anything that suggests marijuana is
responsible for an increase in any violent behavior," Paule said,
adding, "I would say that the perceived risk to marijuana is
probably overstated."
That's the scientist speaking. Here's the father. Asked
what he would tell his 9-year-old son about the risks of smoking
marijuana, this was Paule's answer: "I'd tell him he probably
shouldn't smoke dope before he becomes an adult."
POT RESEARCH LID ABOUT TO BLOW OPEN
Dr. Don McMillan, chairman of the Department of Pharmacology
at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, is also the
school's Wilbur D. Mills professor of Alcoholism and Drug Abuse
Prevention. He led a major study into human tolerance of
marijuana in the early part of his career, and more recently
served as an advisor to the researchers at NCTR in planning of
their study of marijuana's effects on monkeys.
After years during which he said marijuana research was
"stalled," McMillan is once again excited about developments in
the field.
"It looks like the whole lid on marijuana research is about
to blow wide open," he said in a recent interview. "I think
we're going to know a tremendous amount more about the mechanism
of action and how it works on the brain in the next two years."
As marijuana is studied further, its effects, especially
relative to other, legal drugs, will also become better
understood. For example, marijuana is ranked with heroin and LSD
as a Schedule I drug. The federal government rates its potential
for abuse higher than the risk of abusing cocaine, morphine, PCP,
or methadone.
Asked about that, McMillan said, "The thing you have to
remember is that that schedule is a legal classification, not a
medical one."
He said the medical understanding of marijuana is that it
poses a lower risk to society and individual health than that of
two legal drugs -- alcohol and tobacco.
"Marijuana is probably less harmful than either of those --
but of course, there's still a lot we don't know about it."