Although marijuana has a well-deserved reputation for increasing appetite via what stoners call "the munchies," the new research,
which was published in the American Journal of Medicine, is not the
first to find that the drug has a two-faced relationship to weight.
Three prior studies have
shown that marijuana users are less likely to be obese, have a lower
risk for diabetes and have lower body-mass-index measurements. And these
trends occurred despite the fact that they seemed to take in more
calories.
Why? "The most important
finding is that current users of marijuana appeared to have better carbohydrate metabolism than nonusers," says Murray Mittleman, an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and the lead author of the study. "Their fasting insulin levels were lower, and they appeared to be less resistant to the insulin produced by their body to maintain a normal blood-sugar level."
finding is that current users of marijuana appeared to have better carbohydrate metabolism than nonusers," says Murray Mittleman, an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and the lead author of the study. "Their fasting insulin levels were lower, and they appeared to be less resistant to the insulin produced by their body to maintain a normal blood-sugar level."



The research included
over 4,600 men and women participating in the National Health and
Nutrition Examination Survey between 2005 and 2010. Among them, 48% had
smoked marijuana at least once in their lives, and 12% were current
cannabis smokers. The authors controlled for other factors like age,
sex, income, alcohol use, cigarette smoking and physical activity that
could also affect diabetes risk.
Even after these
adjustments, the current marijuana users showed fasting insulin levels
that were 16% lower than those of former or never users, along with a
17% reduction in another measure of insulin resistance as well. Higher
levels on both tests are associated with Type II diabetes, which is
linked with obesity.
Marijuana users also had
higher levels of high-density lipoprotein, the so-called good
cholesterol, which can protect against heart disease. And the regular
smokers also boasted smaller waistlines: on average, they were 1.5
inches (3.8 cm) slimmer than the former users and those who had never
smoked cannabis.
Researchers don't yet
know how to explain these correlations -- and since the study was not a
controlled trial, it's not clear whether marijuana or some other factor
in marijuana users' lifestyles actually accounted for the beneficial
effects.
Studies showed, however,
that the cannabinoid brain receptors affected by marijuana are deeply
involved in appetite and metabolism. But the exact details of how the
compound alters the relationship between appetite, caloric intake and
insulin response isn't obvious yet.
One clue, however, may
lie in the effects of a diet drug that was developed to have the
opposite effect that marijuana has on the brain. That drug, rimonabant,
produced significant weight loss and a drop in fasting insulin levels by
affecting certain cannabinoid receptors in the exact opposite way that
THC, marijuana's main psychoactive ingredient, does.
This action is complex:
rimonabant doesn't simply block the receptor and keep the natural
cannabinoids from activating it. Instead, while the natural cannabinoids
elevate the normal level of activity already going on in the system,
rimonabant lowers it so the result is precisely the reverse of
activating the receptor naturally.
However, because of
psychiatric side effects like increasing suicide risk, rimonabant was
pulled from the European market and never approved in the United States.
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