Cannabis Use Disorder May Be Linked To Increased Risk Of Cardiovascular Disease

From a recent study, Canadian adults with cannabis use disorders appear to have a 60% higher risk than those without it of having their first significant cardiovascular incident.
Cannabis use disorder may be linked to increased risk of cardiovascular disease (Wikimedia Commons)
Cannabis use disorder may be linked to increased risk of cardiovascular disease (Wikimedia Commons)
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 A new study has found that Canadian adults with cannabis use disorder appear to have an approximately 60% higher risk of experiencing their first heart attack, stroke, or other major cardiovascular event than those without cannabis use disorder.

The study, published in Addiction, measured the association between problematic marijuana use and the first-time occurrence of adverse cardiovascular disease events such as heart attack, stroke, cardiac dysrhythmias, and peripheral vascular disease.

Representation of heart attack (Wikimedia Commons)
Representation of heart attack (Wikimedia Commons)

Researchers used five Canadian health databases to create a cohort of nearly 60,000 participants, half with a cannabis use disorder diagnosis and half without, matched by gender, year of birth, and time of presentation to the health system. People with prior adverse cardiovascular disease events were excluded. The participants were tracked from January 2012 to December 2019. Among people with cannabis use disorder, 2.4% (721) experienced a first-time cardiovascular disease event, compared with 1.5% (458) in the unexposed group.

The study, published in Addiction, measured the association between problematic marijuana use and the first-time occurrence of adverse cardiovascular disease events (Representational Image: Wikimedia Commons)
The study, published in Addiction, measured the association between problematic marijuana use and the first-time occurrence of adverse cardiovascular disease events (Representational Image: Wikimedia Commons)

Within the group of people with cannabis use disorder, people with no co-occurring medical illness, no prescriptions, and fewer than five visits to health services in the last six months had an even higher risk of a first-time cardiovascular disease event – approximately 1.4 times higher than for the rest of the cannabis-use-disorder group. This may be because those people considered themselves healthy and may not have acted on or even noticed the warning signs of an imminent heart attack, stroke, or other major cardiovascular event.

Our study doesn’t provide enough information to say that cannabis use disorder causes adverse cardiovascular disease events, but we can go so far as to say that Canadians with cannabis use disorder appear to have a much higher risk of cardiovascular disease than people without the disorder.

Dr. Anees Bahji, lead author of the study

The study contributes to the ongoing dialogue surrounding the health implications of cannabis use disorder and its potential links to cardiovascular health. (Newswise/RN)

Cannabis use disorder may be linked to increased risk of cardiovascular disease (Wikimedia Commons)
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