LONDON - Smoking one cannabis joint is as harmful to a person's lungs as
having up to five cigarettes, according to research published on Tuesday.
An unidentified man smokes a cannabis cigarette at a house in
London before the relaxation of cannabis laws, in this file photo from
January 24, 2004. [Reuters]
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Those who smoked cannabis damaged
both the lungs' small fine airways, used for transporting oxygen, and the large
airways, which blocked air flow, the researchers said.
It meant cannabis smokers complained of wheezing, coughing, and chest
tightness, the study by experts at the Medical Research Institute of New Zealand
found.
The researchers tested 339 people - those who smoked only cannabis, those who
smoked tobacco, those who smoked both and non-smokers.
The study found only those who smoked tobacco suffered from the crippling
lung disease emphysema, but cannabis use stopped the lungs working properly.
"The extent of this damage was directly related to the number of joints
smoked, with higher consumption linked to greater incapacity," said the authors
of the report published in the medical journal Thorax.
"The effect on the lungs of each joint was equivalent to smoking between 2.5
and five cigarettes in one go."
The British government is considering whether cannabis should be reclassified
as a more serious drug because of the dangers associated with stronger strains.
"The danger cannabis poses to respiratory health is consistently being
overlooked," said Helena Shovelton, Chief Executive of the British Lung
Foundation.
"Smoking a joint is more harmful to the lungs than smoking a cigarette and we
have just banned people from doing that in public places because of the health
risks."
Last week British researchers said using marijuana increased the risk of
developing a psychotic illness such as schizophrenia.