Teen pot use linked to later declines in IQ

NEW YORK (AP) - Teens who routinely smoke marijuana risk a long-term drop in their IQ, a new study suggests.
The researchers didn't find the same IQ dip for people who became frequent users of pot after 18. Although experts said the new findings are not definitive, they do fit in with earlier signs that the drug is especially harmful to the developing brain.
"Parents should understand that their adolescents are particularly vulnerable,'" said lead researcher Madeline Meier of Duke University.
Study participants from New Zealand were tested for IQ at age 13, likely before any significant marijuana use, and again at age 38. The mental decline between those two ages was seen only in those who started regularly smoking pot before age 18.
Richie Poulton, a study co-author and professor at the University of Otago in New Zealand, said the message of the research is to stay away from marijuana until adulthood if possible. "For some it's a legal issue," he said, "but for me it's a health issue."
Pot is the most popular illegal drug in the world, with somewhere between 119 million and 224 million users between the ages of 15 and 64 as of 2010, the United Nations reported. Within the United States, 23 percent of high school students said they'd recently smoked marijuana, making it more popular than cigarettes, the federal government reported in June.
Young people "don't think it's risky," said Staci Gruber, a researcher at the Harvard-affiliated MacLean Hospital in Belmont, Mass. Gruber, who didn't participate in the new work, said the idea that marijuana harms the adolescent brain is "something we believe is very likely," and the new finding of IQ declines warrants further investigation.
Experts said the new research is an advance because its methods avoid criticisms of some earlier work, which generally did not measure mental performance before marijuana use began.
"I think this is the cleanest study I've ever read" that looks for long-term harm from marijuana use, said Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, which helped fund the research.
Ken Winters, a psychiatry professor at the University of Minnesota and senior scientist at the Treatment Research Institute in Philadelphia, said the new findings aren't definitive, but they underscore the importance of studying how marijuana may harm young people. He had no role in the work.
Meier and colleagues reported their work online Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. It was funded with governmental grants from the United States and Britain, and a foundation in Zurich.
The study drew on survey data from more than 1,000 people in New Zealand, everybody born in the town of Dunedin during a year-long span ending in 1973. In addition to IQ tests, they were interviewed five times between ages 18 and 38, including questions related to their marijuana use.
At age 18, 52 participants indicated they had become dependent on marijuana, meaning that they continued to use it despite its causing significant health, social or legal problems. Ninety-two others reported dependence starting at a later age.
Researchers compared their IQ scores at age 13 to the score at age 38 and found a drop only in those who had become dependent by 18.
Those deemed dependent in three or more surveys had a drop averaging 8 points. For a person of average intelligence, an 8-point drop would mean ranking higher than only 29 percent of the population rather than 50 percent, the researchers said.
Among participants who'd been dependent at 18 and in at least one later survey, quitting didn't remove the problem. IQ declines showed up even if they'd largely or entirely quit using pot at age 38, analysis showed.
The researchers got similar overall results for IQ decline when they compared participants who reported having used marijuana at least once a week on average for the past year. The researchers had no data on how much was used on each occasion or how potent it was.
Dr. Duncan Clark, a researcher at the University of Pittsburgh, said he's not convinced that mental decline is only in those who become dependent by age 18. He said the main lesson he sees in the overall study results is that to preserve one's IQ, it's best to avoid marijuana entirely, no matter what your age.
The researchers also surveyed people who knew the study participants well at age 38. They found that the more often participants were rated as marijuana-dependent in the surveys over their lifetimes, the more memory and attention problems were noticed by their acquaintances over the previous year.
The researchers didn't find the same IQ dip for people who became frequent users of pot after 18. Although experts said the new findings are not definitive, they do fit in with earlier signs that the drug is especially harmful to the developing brain.
"Parents should understand that their adolescents are particularly vulnerable,'" said lead researcher Madeline Meier of Duke University.
Study participants from New Zealand were tested for IQ at age 13, likely before any significant marijuana use, and again at age 38. The mental decline between those two ages was seen only in those who started regularly smoking pot before age 18.
Richie Poulton, a study co-author and professor at the University of Otago in New Zealand, said the message of the research is to stay away from marijuana until adulthood if possible. "For some it's a legal issue," he said, "but for me it's a health issue."
Pot is the most popular illegal drug in the world, with somewhere between 119 million and 224 million users between the ages of 15 and 64 as of 2010, the United Nations reported. Within the United States, 23 percent of high school students said they'd recently smoked marijuana, making it more popular than cigarettes, the federal government reported in June.
Young people "don't think it's risky," said Staci Gruber, a researcher at the Harvard-affiliated MacLean Hospital in Belmont, Mass. Gruber, who didn't participate in the new work, said the idea that marijuana harms the adolescent brain is "something we believe is very likely," and the new finding of IQ declines warrants further investigation.
Experts said the new research is an advance because its methods avoid criticisms of some earlier work, which generally did not measure mental performance before marijuana use began.
"I think this is the cleanest study I've ever read" that looks for long-term harm from marijuana use, said Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, which helped fund the research.
Ken Winters, a psychiatry professor at the University of Minnesota and senior scientist at the Treatment Research Institute in Philadelphia, said the new findings aren't definitive, but they underscore the importance of studying how marijuana may harm young people. He had no role in the work.
Meier and colleagues reported their work online Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. It was funded with governmental grants from the United States and Britain, and a foundation in Zurich.
The study drew on survey data from more than 1,000 people in New Zealand, everybody born in the town of Dunedin during a year-long span ending in 1973. In addition to IQ tests, they were interviewed five times between ages 18 and 38, including questions related to their marijuana use.
At age 18, 52 participants indicated they had become dependent on marijuana, meaning that they continued to use it despite its causing significant health, social or legal problems. Ninety-two others reported dependence starting at a later age.
Researchers compared their IQ scores at age 13 to the score at age 38 and found a drop only in those who had become dependent by 18.
Those deemed dependent in three or more surveys had a drop averaging 8 points. For a person of average intelligence, an 8-point drop would mean ranking higher than only 29 percent of the population rather than 50 percent, the researchers said.
Among participants who'd been dependent at 18 and in at least one later survey, quitting didn't remove the problem. IQ declines showed up even if they'd largely or entirely quit using pot at age 38, analysis showed.
The researchers got similar overall results for IQ decline when they compared participants who reported having used marijuana at least once a week on average for the past year. The researchers had no data on how much was used on each occasion or how potent it was.
Dr. Duncan Clark, a researcher at the University of Pittsburgh, said he's not convinced that mental decline is only in those who become dependent by age 18. He said the main lesson he sees in the overall study results is that to preserve one's IQ, it's best to avoid marijuana entirely, no matter what your age.
The researchers also surveyed people who knew the study participants well at age 38. They found that the more often participants were rated as marijuana-dependent in the surveys over their lifetimes, the more memory and attention problems were noticed by their acquaintances over the previous year.
Gee really? Oh but it's "from the earth" it's natural..
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If you want to smoke dope in the privacy of your own home, knock yourself out. But frankly, ANY DUI incident should be a felony. As it should with alcohol. Oh but the "medical marijuana" "patients" say it could get them in trouble? Here's an idea.... DON'T DRIVE WHEN YOU'RE HIGH. I know people who have a BAC of .15 and you'd never guess they were drunk. But certainly it's okay for them to go drive on the road right?? Same goes for pot, if you smoked out an hour ago, you shouldn't be driving. Nor should you get high and immediately go driving. God forbid we would do anything to prevent high drivers on the road.
Lets face it, while there are always exceptions to to the rule, the habitual teen dope smoker has zero future, hangs with people who have no future, and realizes at the age of 28 they are still hanging out at mom's house. Â At this point they start pointing the finger at corporate america or the banking system as to why they are in a bad position. Â Kids, if you want a bright future, don't make marijuana a habit. Â Allow your brain to develop.Â
In other news, a taxpayer funded government study found 3 out of 4 people in the united states makes up 75% of the population.
pot is addictive. If not physically, then mentally. Tell a user they can't have their high and they're all up in your face about rights and legality and how it grows in the dirt so it's wholesome and safe, and good for people with "pain".
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Why not admit it's bad for you, just like smoking, drinking and eating fatty foods? Everything has a downside.
They don't care, I know some VN. Veterans been smoking dope since 1966, are so wasted now wheel chair bound, don't even know the time of day, under weight by 30-50 lbs, look like 150 yrs old and barely living, but still smoking dope.
 Reffer madness?
So smoking something called "dope" slices a few IQ points into the rough, eh? Oh, don't worry "medicinal" users, I still support your right to choom without the threat of "The Man' knocking on your door. Wait! That's the Pizza Guy! Mmmmmm, pizza...
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And you can't make me tell the story of when (this guy;unnamed) and this other guy... er... John Doe, were passing a "joint" travelling southbound on 405 between cars. That was incredibly stupid and I hope those guys learned a valuable lesson from that day 35 years ago.Â
Do you really want to wait 10 years and risk seeing then how much your IQ has declined? Â Isn't living life and enjoying life without pot an option rather than taking the risk? Â
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 @Another Offensive Nickname KOMO! If you think one counter-example casts doubt on a study of 1000 test subject over a 20 year period, I'm guessing it was your science classes that kept you from getting 4.0.
"According to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, 5,000 persons in the United States under the age of 21 die each year as a result of underage drinking."
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http://www.livestrong.com/article/234588-teenage-drinking-effects.
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AP science writers should maybe put some comparisons into their propaganda.
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Its not about comparisons, it about a study that shows IQ declines with marajuana usage. Its not saying its worse or better than alcohol use, its just saying marajuana not as good for you as everyone makes it out to be.Â
 @Simoleon82 "Its not about comparisons, it about a study that shows IQ declines with marajuana usage."It's actually about a study that shows IQ declines with routine cannabis use beginning in the teenage years.  This information is not a surprise or anything.  Any mind-altering substance -- whether it be cannabis, dangerous drugs, pharmaceuticals or alcohol -- abused during teen years can definitely cause problems as their brains are still developing.
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This article doesn't mention how, or how much, cannabis the teens used.  When abused, yes, people (especially teens) will certainly have problems. The same holds true for, again, dangerous drugs, pharmaceuticals, alcohol, food, water, anything else that someone abuses.
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When you start including more of the whole picture in things, you start to see more of reality instead of the little one-sided thing that this article is.
I guess it is all how one interprets the article as well, because I read it and although the basics of the study show that it decreases the IQ in those who use it before age 18. I felt that they were pretty clear that it wasn't a definitive study and there were a lot of mitigating factors as you mentioned as well (how much, exactly how often potency etc..)
 @Simoleon82 I seriously doubt that all information in this "study" has been included in this clearly one-sided article. Who paid for this and what is their agenda?
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This "study" uses the phrase "marijuana-dependent" to drive it's point home. Other "studies" have canceled out the addictive aspect of cannabis.
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This is an AP propaganda story in my view. After a 20 year time line, I would bet there is a lot of data that is being withheld, and when data is hidden it turns into propaganda.
 @WARevolution  @Simoleon82 Forget studies about cannabis not being addictive, I've come across far too many people that couldn't stop using it if you put a gun to their head. Â
 @Simoleon82 I do see your point and I do agree that people should always tell their kids to abstain from drugs altogether.  Responsible cannabis consumers agree as well.  I certainly don't condone teens using it except for legitimate medical reasons -- and there aren't too many kids who have a legitimate medical reason to use it.Â
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Well they did mention that it was paid with "governmental grants from the United States and Britain" as well as a Foundation in Zurich which we obviously don't know much about.Â
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You are correct that "marijuana-dependent" isn't specified in this article and although I have read that studies have stated marijuana is not addictive yet  I have also read personal experiences who say that they have been addicted.Â
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With all the information out there these days you can find "propaganda" on either side of the marijuana argument. Obviously, this article is just a summary and interpretation of the actual study. Its up to each person to research the "facts" and decide for themselves. Me, personally (not that you care), I'd prefer to encourage my kids and other kids around them to abstain from drugs all together. Anything that alters the brain has to have some effect on your overall health. In relation to that, if it alters you mind, I believe you can absolutely get addicted to the mind altered state thus be addicted to marijuana (which is obviously personal opinion, but it makes sense to me).
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