It’s because of combustion tho, right? using a dry herb vaporizer will prevent that then
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RubberElectrons@lemmy.world 11 months agoHey cope, thanks for the reply. Consider how we use alcohol to make things like turkey, pork etc tender. Alcohol breaks down fibrous connective tissue, so your bourbon-bbq pulled pork is especially soft and succulent.
Now, consider what happens in your body. A toxic agent reaching all corners of your body, vs an irritating cloud of ash which gets trapped in your alveoli. Neither is good, but evidence strongly suggests that it’s harder to hurt yourself with flower vs booze.
For the record, I partake in both on occasion, but I definitely think alcohol is worse for me, personally. Everybody’s different.
XpeeN@sopuli.xyz 11 months ago
RubberElectrons@lemmy.world 11 months ago
You’re right. Just trying to counter the very confused people saying a glass of wine everyday is good for you lol.
XpeeN@sopuli.xyz 11 months ago
Yeah ik, just pointing that out for the people that just rules out inhalation of weed because of combustion.
RubberElectrons@lemmy.world 11 months ago
Thx for the heads up, knowledge is power.
retrieval4558@mander.xyz 11 months ago
Agree. I work in an ICU and see the effects of alcohol and tobacco CONSTANTLY. I’ve seen a serious problem from cannabis once.
phoneymouse@lemmy.world 11 months ago
Maybe you haven’t yet learned to recognize the impacts of marijuana on people
www.forbes.com/sites/amandaflorian/2023/…/amp/
LinkOpensChest_wav@lemmy.one 11 months ago
This pales in comparison to the damaging effects of alcohol on the heart and the rest of the body
phoneymouse@lemmy.world 11 months ago
Idk heart disease is kind of a big deal. Using neither is probably best.
Styxia@lemmy.world 11 months ago
From the health.com link that references this article includes edibles
So you are indeed correct. To a point. The ICU observation doesn’t minimize the risks of cannabis but provides a perspective on the prevalence of the issue, and the tone in your responses is likely behind the downvotes you are lamenting.
Regardless, thank you for sharing the links, they were helpful.
retrieval4558@mander.xyz 11 months ago
It’s very possible we haven’t learned to recognize them. (although that fact also implies that the effects are subtle, doesn’t it?)
Thank you for the links. I didn’t have time to review them all in detail but I did take the time to find the study that Forbes was referring to ( because a sample size that big is very interesting, even if it was just a population study.
Their inclusion criteria were people who had Cannabis Use Disorder documented on their chart compared to statistically matched people who did not. They tried to control for socioeconomic factors.
In my opinion, it’s worth noting that people who end up with that chart diagnosis are going to be on the heavier end of users, as the majority of people who use pot don’t report it to their doctors nor end up in the EDs with cannabis related complaints.
In comparing the two populations, they found that the ABSOLUTE RISK (not relative risk) of adverse cardiovascular events was increased by 0.9%. Notable limitations to the study include that they don’t know exactly how much cannabis each person was using, they couldn’t fully control for tobacco use, and (imo) the exclusion of people with previous cardiovascular events was limited to a 2 year lookback, which may be a bit limiting.
So the conclusions we can draw from this is “within a population of the heaviest cannabis users with greater than average healthcare exposure, risk of CVD goes up by less than a percent.”
I’m totally willing to believe that it presents some risk- I just think it’s more likely to be even less of a factor (or at least in the same ballpark) in the development of CVD than things like diet and exercise.
Comparing this study to some established numbers on tobacco can be helpful here. A quick search on the medical database UpToDate showed me some data suggesting that in heavy smokers, the risk of CVD was 600% greater (relative risk), which is 10 times higher than the 60% relative risk increase that we saw in the cannabis study.
doi.org/10.1111/add.16337 cannabis study pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8565161/ tobacco study