Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0034067 (emphysema)
11,506 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Marijuana seems firmly established as another social drug in Western countries, regardless of its current legal status. Patterns of use vary widely. As with other social drugs, the pattern of use is critical in determining adverse effects on health. Perhaps the major area of concern about marijuana use is among the very young. Using any drug on a regular basis that alters reality may be detrimental to the psychosocial maturation of young persons. Chronic use of marijuana may stunt the emotional growth of youngsters. Evidence for an amotivational syndrome is largely based on clinical reports; whether marijuana use is a cause or effect is uncertain. A marijuana psychosis, long rumored, has been difficult to prove. No one doubts that marijuana use may aggravate existing psychoses or other severe emotional disorders. Brain damage has not been proved. Physical dependence is rarely encountered in the usual patterns of social use, despite some degree of tolerance that may develop. The endocrine effects of the drug might be expected to delay puberty in prepubertal boys, but actual instances have been rare. As with any material that is smoked, chronic smoking of marijuana will produce bronchitis; emphysema or lung cancer have not yet been documented. Cardiovascular effects of the drug are harmful to those with preexisting heart disease; fortunately the number of users with such conditions is minimal. Fears that the drug might accumulate in the body to the point of toxicity have been groundless. The potential deleterious effects of marijuana use on driving ability seem to be self-evident; proof of such impairment has been more difficult. The drug is probably harmful when taken during pregnancy, but the risk is uncertain. One would be prudent to avoid marijuana during pregnancy, just as one would do with most other drugs not essential to life or well-being. No clinical consequences have been noted from the effects of the drug on immune response, chromosomes, or cell metabolites. Contamination of marijuana by spraying with defoliants has created the clearest danger to health; such attempts to control production should be abandoned. Therapeutic uses for marijuana, THC, or cannabinoid homologs are being actively explored. Only the synthetic homolog, nabilone, has been approved for use to control nausea and vomiting associated with cancer chemotherapy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Health aspects of cannabis. 352 Jun 5

THE AIM OF THIS STUDY WAS TO INVESTIGATE THE EFFECT OF MATERNAL NICOTINE EXPOSURE DURING GESTATION AND LACTATION ON: (1) the development of the gas exchange area of the lungs of the offspring; and (2) to determine whether these effects are reversible. Pregnant rats received daily nicotine (subcutaneously 1mgkg(-1) body weight) during gestation and lactation. Nicotine administration started 1 day after mating and lasted until weaning on postnatal day 21. The offspring were exposed to nicotine via the placenta and mother's milk only. The lung tissue of the neonates was collected on postnatal days 14, 21, 35 and 42 and prepared for morphometry. The results obtained show that maternal nicotine exposure resulted in bigger alveolar volumes and suppressed alveolarisation in the lungs of the offspring. Flattening of the alveoli occurred as the animals aged and as a consequence the internal surface area available for gas exchange decreased; a condition that resembles panlobular emphysema. It is unlikely that these effects of maternal nicotine exposure during gestation and lactation on lung development in the offspring was due to a lower birth weight, or a reduction in the period of gestation, or a poor supply of nutrients to the offspring. The changes in the gas-exchange region of the nicotine-exposed rat pups appear to be irreversible.
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PMID:Chronic maternal nicotine exposure during gestation and lactation and the development of the lung parenchyma in the offspring. Response to nicotine withdrawal. 1464 6