| Literature DB >> 31920665 |
Sabrina Rahman Archie1, Luca Cucullo1,2.
Abstract
Apart from being used as a medicine, cannabis or marijuana is the most widely abused recreational drug all over the world. The legalization and decriminalization of cannabis in Canada and various states of USA may be the underlying reason of the widespread popularity of it among young population. Various studies have reported about the relationship between cannabis use and different detrimental effects like cardiovascular, cerebrovascular, and neurological complications among different age groups. Specifically, the young population is getting adversely affected by this, harmful yet, readily accessible recreational drug. Although the mechanism behind cannabis mediated neurological and cerebrovascular complications has not been elucidated yet, the results of these studies have confirmed the association of these diseases with cannabis. Given the lack of comprehensive study relating these harmful complications with cannabis use, the aim of this narrative literature review article is to evaluate and summarize current studies on cannabis consumption and cerebrovascular/neurological diseases along with the leading toxicological mechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: abuse; cannabis; cerebrovascular; drug; neurodegenerative; oxidative stress; recreational; stroke
Year: 2019 PMID: 31920665 PMCID: PMC6915047 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2019.01481
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1Chemical structure of two of the major cannabinoids contained in Marijuana. Depicted on the left is the chemical structure of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). THC is the principal psychoactive constituent of cannabis. THC acts as a partial agonist at the cannabinoid receptor CB1 (primarily located in the brain and spinal cord as well as CB2 receptor expressed in cells of the immune system. On the right is depicted the chemical structure of cannabidiol (CBD). By contract with THC, CBD does not have any psychotropic effects, but appears to have some have anti-anxiety and anti-psychotic properties. CBD has a lower affinity for both CB1 and CB2 receptor when compared to THC. Highlighted in red are the chemical structure differences between CBD and THC.
Figure 2Schematic illustration of the primary location of CB1 and CB2 receptor. Note that CB1 receptor are primarily located in the brain and spinal cord and to a much lesser extent there are also present in the gastrointestinal tract, reproductive organs as well as muscles and vascular system. CB2 receptors are primary located in spleen, skin, and bones as well as the immune cells.
Figure 3Subcellular localization and activity of CB1 receptors. CB1 receptors are primary located on the cell membrane where their activation lead to inhibition of adenylate cyclase and a resulting reduction of cyclic AMP. In parallel CB1 activation promotes the upregulation of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) which is involved in directing cellular responses to mitogens, heat shock, osmotic stress, and proinflammatory stimuli (e.g. cytokines). At the mitochondrial level, CB1 activation leads to inhibition of mitochondrial respiration and production of cAMP. CB1 receptors are also present at the level of lysosomes where they prompt a release of calcium from these internal storage units and increase the intracellular calcium levels. Lysosome permeability is also increased.
List of case reports related to neurovascular complications after natural and synthetic cannabinoid use (according to year; 1964–2019).
| No of patient | Sex/Age | Types of cannabinoids | Risk factors | Neurovascular complication | Year | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 01 | M/18 | Cannabis | C | Undetermined | 1964 | ( |
| 01 | M/19 | Cannabis | C | Undetermined | 1977 | ( |
| 02 | M/28/27 | Cannabis | C | Undetermined | 1987 | ( |
| 02 | M/34/32 | Cannabis | C(2)/T(2) | IS | 1991 | ( |
| 01 | M/30 | Cannabis | C/T/A | IS | 1992 | ( |
| 01 | M/22 | Cannabis | C/T/A | TIA and IS | 1996 | ( |
| 01 | M/29 | Cannabis | C/T/A | TIA and IS | 1997 | ( |
| 03 | M/18/26/30 | Cannabis | C(3)/T(2) | TIA | 2000 | ( |
| 01 | M/23 | Cannabis | C/T/A | IS | 2001 | ( |
| 01 | M/18 | Cannabis | C/T | IS | 2001 | ( |
| 01 | M/33 | Cannabis | C/T | IS | 2002 | ( |
| 01 | M/27 | Cannabis | C/T | IS | 2002 | ( |
| 01 | M/37 | Cannabis | C/T/L | IS | 2004 | ( |
| 03 | M/15/16/17 | Cannabis | C(3) | IS | 2004 | ( |
| 01 | M/50 | Cannabis | C/T | TIA and IS | 2005 | ( |
| 01 | M/36 | Cannabis | C/A | IS | 2005 | ( |
| 02 | M/26/29 | Cannabis | C | IS | 2006 | ( |
| 01 | F/41 | Cannabis | C | IS | 2006 | ( |
| 01 | M/27 | Cannabis | C/T/A | IS | 2007 | ( |
| 01 | M/46 | Cannabis | C/A/MoA/H/L | IS | 2007 | ( |
| 01 | F/34 | Cannabis | C/T | ICH | 2008 | ( |
| 01 | M/46 | Cannabis | C/T | IS | 2008 | ( |
| 01 | M/22 | Cannabis | C | IS | 2009 | ( |
| 01 | F/45 | Cannabis | C/T/A | IS | 2010 | ( |
| 01 | M/26 | Cannabis | C/T | IS | 2011 | ( |
| 01 | M/24 | Cannabis | C/T | IS | 2011 | ( |
| 01 | M/40 | Cannabis | C/T/A | IS | 2011 | ( |
| 01 | M/18 | Synthetic Cannabinoid: Kronic purple haze | C | SAH | 2011 | ( |
| 01 | M/33 | Cannabis | C/T | IS | 2012 | ( |
| 01 | M/32 | Cannabis | C/T | IS | 2012 | ( |
| 02 | M/27 | Cannabis | C(2)/T(1)/MoA(1)/A(1) | SAH | 2012 | ( |
| 14 | M/22/37/44/49/50/56/58/59/61/63 | Cannabis | C(14)/T(13)/H(3)/A(3) | IS | 2012 | ( |
| 01 | M/41 | Synthetic cannabinoid: Spice; daily use | C | SAH | 2012 | ( |
| 01 | M/16 | Cannabis | C | IS | 2013 | ( |
| 02 | F/23/53 | Cannabis | C(2) | IS | 2013 | ( |
| 02 | F/22 | Synthetic cannabinoid: K2 | C | IS | 2013 | ( |
| F/26 | Synthetic cannabinoid: peak extreme | C/T | ||||
| 02 | M/26 | Synthetic: K2 (JWH-018) | C | IS | 2013 | ( |
| F/19 | Synthetic: K2 (JWH-018) | C/T | ||||
| 01 | M/42 | Cannabis | C | TIA and IS | 2014 | ( |
| 01 | M/27 | Cannabis | C/A | IS | 2014 | ( |
| 01 | M/26 | Cannabis | C | IS | 2014 | ( |
| 01 | F/32 | Cannabis | C/MoA | IS | 2014 | ( |
| 01 | M/34 | Cannabis | C/T/A | IS | 2014 | ( |
| 01 | M/22 | Cannabis | C | IS | 2014 | ( |
| 01 | M/23 | Cannabis | C/T | IS | 2014 | ( |
| 01 | M/33 | Synthetic cannabinoid: WTF (XLR-11 analyzed in the product) | C | IS | 2014 | ( |
| 01 | M/21 | Cannabis | C | IS | 2015 | ( |
| 01 | F/50 | Cannabis | C/H/L/MoA | IS | 2015 | ( |
| 03 | M/28/33 | Cannabis | C(3)/T(2)/A(2) | IS | 2015 | ( |
| 01 | M/19 | Cannabis | C | IS | 2015 | ( |
| 01 | M/38 | Cannabis | C/T/A | ICH and IS | 2015 | ( |
| 14 | M/19/20/21/29/31/36/37/38/44 | Cannabis | C(14)/T(14)/MoA(2)/D(4)/H(3)/A(5) | IS | 2015 | ( |
| 01 | M/45 | Synthetic cannabinoid: | C/T/H/D | SAH | 2015 | ( |
| 02 | M/31 | Synthetic cannabinoid: Spice (K2), XLR-11 analyzed in the packet | C | SAH/ICH | 2015 | ( |
| F/25 | Synthetic cannabinoid: Spice (K2) + marijuana | SAH/IS | ||||
| 01 | M/33 | Cannabis | C/T | IS | 2016 | ( |
| 01 | M/25 | Cannabis | C/A | IS | 2016 | ( |
| 01 | M/48 | Synthetic cannabinoid: Chronic Bonzai | C/T | IS | 2016 | ( |
| 01 | M/15 | Synthetic: Bonzai (heavy smoker for 2.5 years) | C/T | IS | 2016 | ( |
| 01 | F/32 | Synthetic cannabinoid: chronic use | C/T | IS | 2016 | ( |
| 01 | M/25 | Munakka or Bhang tablets | C/A | IS | 2016 | ( |
| 01 | M/25 | Cannabis joints | C/T/A | HS | 2017 | ( |
| 01 | F/14 | Cannabis | C/A | IS | 2017 | ( |
| 01 | F-51 | Cannabis | C | ICH | 2017 | ( |
| 01 | M/27 | Raw cannabis | C | ICH | 2017 | ( |
| 01 | M/37 | Cannabis | C/T | IS | 2018 | ( |
| 01 | M/36 | Synthetic cannabinoid, K2 | C/T/A | IS | 2018 | ( |
| 01 | F/47 | Synthetic cannabinoid | C | IS | 2018 | ( |
| 01 | M/37 | Marijuana | C/T | IS | 2019 | ( |
M, male; F, female; C, cannabis; SC, synthetic cannabinoids; T, tobacco; A, alcohol; L, dyslipidemia; MoA, migraine without aura; H, hypertension; FD, diabetes; IS, ischemic stroke; SAH, subarachnoid haemorrhage; ICH, intracranial haemorrhage; TIA, transient ischemic attack.
Summary of population-based analysis related to cannabis use, conducted between 2000 and 2015.
| Study type | Duration | Study design | Outcome | Strength | Limitation | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cross-sectional | 2000–2003 | N = 3,148,165 patients’ age: 18–44 | Cannabis was considered as a risk factor for IS (OR 1.76, 95% CI 1.15–2.71) and for hemorrhagic stroke (OR 1.36, 95% CI 0.9–2.06) | -Large sample size, other risk factors e.g. amphetamine, cocaine were considered | -Unable to distinguish between primary and secondary or recurrent strokes. | ( |
| -Study was conducted in a database representative of hospitalized conditions in all but the smallest rural hospitals in Texas. | - Possibility of misclassification of variables in a database of International classification of diseases, ninth revision, clinical modification (ICD-9-CM)–coded discharge diagnoses. | |||||
| Cross-sectional | 2004–2007 | N = 200, Mean age at admission was 28.0 years (95% CI 26.7, 29.3). | Four cerebrovascular accidents in patients below 40 were found related to cannabis use | -Accurate detection of cannabis related hospitalization. | -Study was conducted in a restricted geographical area | ( |
| -Other AEs e.g. psychiatric disorders, acute intoxication, respiratory and cardiovascular disorders were recorded. | -Small sample size. | |||||
| - Difficulty in assessing precise epidemiological reference data in a context of illicit drug consumption. | ||||||
| Case-control | 2009 | Patients’ age: 18–55 | 15.6% of patients had IS/TIA, cannabis use was related to increased risk of IS/TIA (OR: 2.30, 95% CI 1.08–5.08) | -Evidence of an association between a lifestyle that includes cannabis and tobacco, and IS | -Association between cannabis and IS/TIA independent of tobacco could not be confirmed. | ( |
| - Use of a control cohort | - Other factors e.g. socioeconomic or employment status, alcohol and/or drug use, could not be measured. | |||||
| -Urinary drug screens were conducted. | -Absence of extensive comparisons between patients and controls | |||||
| Case series | 2006–2010 | N = 1,979, mean age: 34.3 | 1.8% cardiovascular complications reported, three of which were cerebrovascular complications (acute cerebral angiopathy, transient cortical blindness and cerebral artery spasm. | -Long study period | -lack of data due to underreporting of cases. | ( |
| -Cardiovascular disorders were focused. | Some cases were not exhaustively informed. | |||||
| - Toxicologic analyses were available in only 37% of cases. Lack of data on cardiac or vascular disease history, body mass index. | ||||||
| Cross-sectional | 1999–2002 | 20–24 years (N = 2,383), 40–44 years (N = 2,525), and 60–64 years (N = 2,547) | 153 stroke/TIA cases (2.1%). Cannabis users (n = 1,043) had 3.3 times the rate of stroke/TIA (95% CI 1.8–6.3, | -Large sample size based on different age range. | -Lack of detailed history of participants’ cannabis use. | ( |
| -Able to adjust for a wide variety of lifestyle and health factors that were related to stroke/TIA. | -Only correlate past year cannabis use with lifetime occurrence of stroke. | |||||
| -Unable to control tobacco consumption concurrently with cannabis, family history of stroke/TIA, hyperlipidemia, or other drug use (e.g. recreational stimulant use) | ||||||
| Cohort | 2004–2011 | N = 2,496,166 | Greater incidence of IS among cannabis users compared to non-users (RR 1.13, 95% CI 1.11–1.15) | -Long study period | -Only primary diagnoses of AIS were included which may resulted in under-diagnosis of AIS patients. | ( |
| -Association of other risk factors e.g. tobacco, cocaine, amphetamine was also considered. | -Unable to comprise any dose-dependent mechanisms of cannabis use due to the limitations of the ICD-9-CM coding system. | |||||
| - lack of data on preadmission functional status and severity in the NIS, constrains adjustment for AIS severity. | ||||||
| Cohort | 2004–2011 | Cannabis users: N = 2,496,165 | Aneurysmal SAH incidence was slightly increased in the cannabis cohort compared to non-cannabis cohort (RR 1.07, 95% CI 1.02–1.11) | -Long study period | - Possibility of inaccuracy of diagnoses and procedural codes used to identify SAH patients from the NIS database. | ( |
| - Use of the NIS database. | - Possibility of misclassification and under-classification of drug use using secondary ICD-9-CM codes. | |||||
| -Large sample size | - No data related to the time from last drug use to aSAH was available. | |||||
| - Assessment of preadmission functional status and severity of aSAH at admission was not possible to determine using NIS. | ||||||
| Cohort | 2009–2014 | N = 725 ICH | Cannabinoid use in 8.6% ICH. No link was found between cannabinoid use and specific characteristics of ICH. CB+ patients had milder ICH presentation and less disability at discharge. | -Use of international, multicenter, observational, collaborative database. | -Lack of data on time of cannabis consumption. | ( |
| Cohort | 2010–2015 | N = 108 | 25.9% with CB+ and delayed cerebral ischemia was diagnosed in 50% of CB+. CB+ was independently associated with delayed cerebral ischemia (OR, 2.68; 95% CI, 1.03–6.99; | -Long study period | -Lack of patient care uniformity. | ( |
| - UDS was performed. | -Limited ability to identify and include other relevant clinical features, including cardiopulmonary comorbidities, infections, recurrent aneurysmal rupture, hydrocephalus, and seizures. | |||||
| -Unable to differentiate new cannabis use from residual drug excretion, considering that cannabinoids may persist in the urine for several days/weeks. | ||||||
| -Unable to differentiate chronic use from single-episode cannabis consumption. | ||||||
| -Unable to eliminate the possibility of false positive or negative UDS completely. |
OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; RR, relative risk; ICH, intracranial hemorrhage; SAH, subarachnoid hemorrhage; TIA, transient ischemic stroke; IS, ischemic stroke; CB+, cannabinoid user; UDS, urine drug screen.
Figure 4Schematic illustration of the Activation of the cellular antioxidative response system under normal and stress condition. Under normal conditions, the response to injury is adaptive, designed to restore homoeostasis and to protect the cell from further injury. In response to excessive oxidative stress stimuli, NADPH oxidase is activated, producing an excess of O2‑ which in the presence of nitric oxide (.NO; also abundant in CS and release in response to IR) results in formation of peroxinitrite (ONOO‑). Furthermore, the excess of H2O2 leads to the formation of hydroxyl radicals (OH; Fenton’s reaction). The unchecked OS leads then to mitochondrial depolarization, lipid peroxidation, DNA fragmentation and inflammation which at the cerebrovascular level can cause BBB damage and ultimately facilitate the onset of CNS diseases.
Adverse psychiatric consequence of cannabis use (NIDA, 2019a).
| Acute (present during intoxication) | Persistent (lasting longer than intoxication, but may be temporary) | Long-term (total effects of repeated use) |
|---|---|---|
| Impairment of short-term memory | Impaired learning and coordination | Potential for marijuana addiction |
| Impairment of cognitive functions | Sleep disorder | Impairment of learning and memory with potential loss of IQ |
| Impaired coordination and balance | Increased risk of other drug and alcohol use disorders | |
| Anxiety, paranoia | Increased risk of schizophrenia in people with genetic vulnerability | |
| Psychosis (uncommon) |