Pubdate: Sat, 14 Jul 2001 Source: Times, The (UK) Copyright: 2001 Times Newspapers Ltd Contact: http://www.the-times.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/454 Author: Susan Greenfield Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) MAN, WE'VE GOT TO GET OUT OF THESE JOINTS It Would Be Mind-Blowing Folly To Remain Silent While Cannabis Is Legalised So how can we be sure that cannabis is harmless, and what is it that is so good about it anyway? If you were to ask the same questions of genetically modified foods, the answer would be: no evidence of harm as yet, and much potential for good. Yet GM foods are reviled, whereas for the drug that suddenly many want to legalise, the answers are just the opposite. We know that under experimental conditions exposure to cannabis can cause a severe shrinkage and, indeed, death of brain cells - most notably in key areas such as the hippocampus, related to memory. Small surprise, then, that we see impairments in memory and thinking with cannabis use. But my own concern is more subtle and pervasive. We are born with pretty much all the brain cells we will ever have - it is the connections between cells that accounts for the growth of brain after birth. Moreover, the most marvellous thing about being born a human being is that you will enter the world with a unique configuration of brain cell connections. So even if you are a clone - that is to say an identical twin - you will have a unique brain. As we develop more sophisticated brains, gradually emphasis shifts from nature to nurture, from reliance on instinct and genetic mandates to a flexibility where individual experiences can shape us as individuals. Examples abound of how the environment and our activities can influence the connectivity of brain cells. For example, London taxi drivers turned out recently to have a larger area of hippocampus than other drivers of comparable age, and it has been shown that by engaging in piano exercises people can enhance the brain territory related to their fingers. We know that experience and interaction with an enriched environment can enhance the connections of the branches of brain cells, and that will then dictate the degree of connectivity of which the brain is capable. Hence, every moment of our lives we are "personalising" our own individual brains. It is the result of this process that I would call the "mind". Of course, it is possible to "blow your mind" and be "out of your mind". I would argue that that is precisely what one is doing with drugs. Drugs work on the connections between brain cells, changing the efficiency of how one cell communicates with another. Moreover, by working at the chemical locks and keys that enable a transmitter released from one brain cell to interact with the next cell along, drugs can tamper with the message that is sent. Viewed in this way, one can see that drugs have the potential to leave a lasting mark on the brain. Drugs could, literally, transform your mind. Of course, an immediate answer is that cannabis is "no different" from alcohol or nicotine. This claim is simply not true. Cannabis spliffs are more pernicious than ordinary cigarettes - they contain higher levels of carcinogens, tar and other toxins. And the primary mechanism of the action of alcohol on the brain is quite different from that of cannabis. Alcohol works mainly on the walls of the brain cells, making them more sluggish and less efficient at sending the electrical blips. However, cannabis works on its very own receptors; this means that it has a much more direct means for changing not just the short-term signalling from one cell to another, but also a greater chance of influencing long-term changes within the brain. The biochemical potential is there, therefore, for cannabis to have a more targeted and longer-lasting effect on brain functions. I do not believe there has yet been a laboratory experiment comparing directly and under identical conditions, in the same brain tissue, the effect of alcohol versus nicotine. Nonetheless, we already know that the effects of these drugs on human beings cannot be the same. Not only are there reports of severe memory loss and other cognitive impairments with cannabis, but there is the much vaunted pain-killing effect. This effect of cannabis does deserve further exploration as a therapeutic tool and, if it is proven, then it could well take its place among prescribed drugs such as morphine. But there is a world of difference between a drug prescribed under clinical supervision for a recognised illness, for which any possible side-effects or risk may be off-set by the misery of the condition, compared to taking a drug in a healthy brain and body. If cannabis is such a powerful pain-killer, then just think what it does to the nervous system: it must be having, indeed, a very strong effect. And since no one has recommended alcohol and nicotine with equivalent enthusiasm for severe pain, surely that demonstrates that analogies are fallacious. It is impossible at this stage to make categorical statements as to how dangerous cannabis is and how exactly it compares with other drugs, but it is a drug and it is different from those that are in legal use. Fine, if you wish to risk "blowing your mind"; changing the way you see the world. But far from shrugging one's shoulders and trying to turn the clock back to a Sixties hippy stance of passivity and stupefaction, surely we should instead be questioning the priorities of budgets, and how society operates. Perhaps, most importantly, we should be asking why people want to take cannabis in the first place. We are not doing the public a service by pretending all is pharmacologically cool man, nor by circumventing the issues of how to make life really worth living in the 21st century. Baroness Greenfield is a professor of pharmacology and Director of the Royal Institution. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh Sutcliffe