Pubdate: Sun, 25 Jan 2015 Source: Indianapolis Star (IN) Copyright: 2015 Indianapolis Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www2.indystar.com/help/letters.html Website: http://www.indystar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/210 Author: Dr. Dick Huber DON'T FALL FOR MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION Some legislators and citizens are ready to legalize marijuana. Then Indiana would gain needed revenue dollars, people with certain medical conditions might benefit and everyone would live high and happy thereafter. End of story? Not. Look at the total picture. When discussing drugs, always keep in mind that the human brain is still developing until about the age of 25. Drugs that might not affect an older person's brain could cause drastic and permanent damage to a young person's developing brain. Long-term marijuana users who started using when young were later found to have a drop in their IQ. Tetracycline is a useful antibiotic but may cause permanent yellowing of the teeth if given to children whose teeth are still developing before age 8. We're against giving tetracycline to children because we don't want them marked for life with discolored teeth. But yet don't seem to mind that marijuana before 25 may result in a damaged brain and a lower IQ for life. We see the teeth but ignore the brain. We often hear that marijuana should be legalized but kept out of the hands of our youth. Look at the success we've had keeping legalized tobacco and alcohol from our youth. You can be assured we won't have any better success with marijuana. Initially, post traumatic stress, Alzheimer and Parkinson disease were claimed to benefit from marijuana even though no clinical trials revealed such. Now some data support that marijuana for some of these conditions is associated with worse outcomes. The marijuana (cannabis) plant contains more than 400 chemicals. Many of the reports endorsing the usefulness of marijuana were looking at only a few compounds, mainly THC, cannabinol and cannabidiol, when used as single ingredients. But these ingredients may have entirely different, harmful and unknown effects if taken in combination with a few hundred of the other chemicals present in marijuana. We need vitamin A but not when the vitamin A comes from the poison ivy plant. So we look for another source of vitamin A that does not have all the bad effects. Aspirin or acetaminophen have benefits but if one of these were added to several hundred other chemicals as in the marijuana plant, might the results be entirely different? Look for information that shows what the whole marijuana plant will do, not just one or two ingredients used separately from the plant. Legislators and citizens, stop. Get off your high and look at the big picture. Weigh the pros and cons. One or two ingredients from the marijuana plant may show some benefits but when combined with 400 other chemicals, may cause major and long-lasting effects, especially to the brains of our young people. I'm willing to forego something that a few believe beneficial if a greater number are adversely affected. Which side are you on? Dr. Dick Huber, Greenwood - --- MAP posted-by: Matt