Pubdate: Fri, 03 Mar 2000 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2000 The New York Times Company Contact: 229 West 43rd Street, New York, NY 10036 Fax: (212) 556-3622 Website: http://www.nytimes.com/ Forum: http://www10.nytimes.com/comment/ Author: Holcomb B. Noble REPORT LINKS HEART ATTACKS TO MARIJUANA In what is believed to be the first documented link between smoking marijuana and heart attacks, a study has found that a middle-age person's risk of heart attack rises nearly fivefold in the first hour after smoking marijuana. The study was presented yesterday by Dr. Murray A. Middleman at the American Heart Association's annual conference on cardiovascular disease in San Diego. Dr. Middleman, an internist, heads a team of specialists that has been reporting on risk factors in heart attacks for the past six years. Members of the team are from Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, the Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard School of Public Health, all in Boston. The marijuana report is one of a series of studies on marijuana under way at medical schools and universities throughout the country. One, at the Columbia University, reported that a psychological dependency on marijuana might develop among users. Another, at the University of Washington, found that skillful child rearing significantly increased the age at which young people began using marijuana and alcohol. Describing the heart study, Dr. Middleman said that smoking marijuana increased the heart rate by about 40 beats per minute. "It also causes blood pressure to increase when the person is lying down," he said, "and then abruptly fall when the person stands up, often causing dizziness. These effects may pose significant risk, especially in people with unrecognized coronary disease." Dr. Lynn A. Smaha, president of the American Heart Association, said the study produced important information in the search for factors that bring on attacks. Dr. Smaha and other specialists said they knew of no previous study that had pinpointed marijuana as one of them. Dr. Middleman said the study might be of concern to baby boomers who continued to use marijuana as they aged. "Many of these people were users of marijuana when they were in their teens and 20's," he said, "and sizable portion of them may still use the drug, either frequently or occasionally. They should at least be aware that their risk of heart attack suddenly soars each time they take the drug." Dr. Middleman also said that in the debate over the medicinal use of marijuana, it might be judged inadvisable for people with existing coronary disease. The Boston group studied 3,882 patients who had survived heart attacks and found that 124 reported using marijuana regularly. Of those, 37 said they had used it within 24 hours of their heart attacks and 9 within the hour of their attacks. The relative risk of heart attack increased 4.8 times within the first hour but dropped to 1.7 times higher in the second hour, suggesting a rapid decline in the acute cardiac effects, the researchers said. The group previously reported on other triggers of heart attacks, including cocaine, exercise, sex and psychological conditions. The latest report said smoking marijuana was "about twice as dangerous as exercise for a fit person, sex for a sedentary person, a tantrum of anger or a bout of anxiety." But it also said it was less risky than a "spurt of exercise for a couch potato or a snort of cocaine." Further studies will have to determine why marijuana, or the key chemical in it, tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), may bring on heart attacks. But the researchers speculate that it is because of the extra physical stress from the increased heartbeat and blood pressure and the breaks they may cause in the lining of the blood vessels, especially among people with elevated cholesterol levels. The breaks may set off the formation of blood clots. In the study at the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia, Dr. Mirian W. Fishman said surveys showed that the use of marijuana among young people had risen sharply since 1990 but little had been determined about whether people become dependent upon it. Dr. Margaret Haney, the lead author of the report, and colleagues conducted a study that Dr. Fishman said suggested that daily use of marijuana might develop a psychological dependence. Marijuana is not considered physically addictive. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D