Is Marijuana beneficial for youths?

What Smoking Weed Does to Teen Brains A Look at the Scientific Research Does Smoking Weed Really Make Teens Dumber? The verdict is still out, but scientific evidence points toward yes. The more weed that teens consume at a younger age, the more problems they tend to have later in life. Why? Probably because the brain is still forming during teenage and young-adult years. The tissue itself is still developing connections between brain regions and producing the cells that process information. Neurodevelopment is particularly active during childhood and adolescence and continues until at least age 25. Heavy use of weed during that time has been linked to permanent problems with memory, learning, perception, impulse control, and more. But it's important to know that cause and effect when it comes to cannabis are still an open question. Marijuana could make teens dumber, or dumber teens could be more likely to want to smoke a lot of pot. What Kind of Research Has Been Done? Researchers at Duke University recently concluded a study of more than 1,000 people from the time they were born until they reached the age of 38. Studies were performed periodically throughout their lives, and were carefully controlled to ensure test subjects did not have any other drug or alcohol addictions or psychological disorders, and were not high at the time of the test. They found that those who used pot more than once weekly before age 18 displayed more severely impaired intelligence, slower reaction times, shorter attention spans, and poorer listening skills than those who began using marijuana after age 18. Other groups of scientists have studied the brains of teenagers, too. Compared to those who never used pot, the tissue in the brains of young pot users has been shown to exhibit structural changes. Specifically, the white matter (the cells in our brains that connect different areas) is more porous in subjects that began regularly using pot at a young age, a physical state associated with slower mental processing. Gray matter (the cells in the brain responsible for processing information) showed changes in shape and size, alterations that are associated with executive dysfunction, mood issues, and poor memory. In addition, the brains of teenagers who are heavy pot users have lower blood flow, develop abnormal neuron connections, and show inefficient brain activation patterns. All of these physical features are associated with poor memory, attention, impulse control, organization, and time management. The Connection Between Weed Use and Mental Illness Teenagers who use weed daily have increased rates of depression, anxiety, and psychosis later in life. (Psychosis means someone has lost connection with reality—i.e., they see and/or hear things that don't exist.) Scientists cannot conclude whether heavy weed use causes psychosis among people who otherwise wouldn't develop symptoms, or whether people who are predisposed to being psychotic tend to seek out weed to help them deal with the world, but whatever the case, psychosis and heavy pot use in adolescence are linked.

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