According to NIH's National Institute on Drug Abuse, animal research
suggests that the body's neural system receptors play a role in controlling
the brain's maturation, particularly in the development of emotional
responses. Thus, THC (tetrahydrocannabinol – the main mind-altering
ingredient found in marijuana) exposure very early in life may negatively
affect brain development.
The medical community contends that more research is needed to know
how marijuana use during pregnancy impacts the health and development
of infants. With an increased use of recreational marijuana as new policies
have made the drug legal in 19 U.S. states, and significant increases in
pregnant women seeking treatment for substance use disorder, it's integral
that funding is allocated to learn more about the effects of marijuana use
during pregnancy.
One study found roughly 20% of pregnant women 24-years-old and
younger screened positive for marijuana. This revealed they are twice as
likely to screen positive for marijuana use when drug tested as opposed
to self-reporting.
Research in rats, the NIH reports, reveals exposure to even low
concentrations of THC late in pregnancy could have profound and
long-lasting consequences for both brain and behavior in offspring. Human
studies have shown that some babies born to women who used marijuana
during their pregnancies respond differently to visual stimuli, tremble more,
and have a high-pitched cry – which would indicate problems with
neurological development.
NIH contends that school children prenatally exposed to marijuana are
more likely to show gaps in problem-solving skills, memory and the ability
to remain attentive. Medical researchers agree that more research is
needed to segment marijuana's specific effects from environmental factors
and use of other substances by mothers.
Because roughly half of U.S. pregnancies are unplanned – with the rate
considerably higher for teens and young adults – many women use
marijuana without knowing they are pregnant.
A different school of thought
The American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ACOG) reports that
somewhere between two percent and five percent of women say they used
marijuana while pregnant. And since the drug crosses the placenta, harm
to the fetus is plausible although the evidence is still unreliable. A review
and analysis of 31 previously published studies have found no independent
connection between marijuana use and adverse births.
However, there are "confounding" factors for low birth weight and preterm
delivery with tobacco use, which is a common combination. Shayna Conner,
an assistant professor in the division of maternal-fetal medicine and
ultrasound at Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine
concludes that from available evidence the risk surrounding low birth
weight and preterm delivery is from tobacco use and other factors – not
from marijuana.
However, Conner is not advocating that expecting moms use this info as
the green light to roll a joint and get high. "Any foreign substance that
doesn't directly benefit maternal or fetal health should be avoided," she
says.
There are several reasons not to smoke marijuana. For starters, the body
of evidence on whether marijuana is harmful to the fetus is inconsistent.
Second, little has been done to research long-term risks of
neurodevelopment problems – cognitive difficulties or ADHD – in babies
exposed to marijuana in the womb.
"Any time there is a substance that we're not sure of the effects on the
fetus or the mother during pregnancy, unless we know of a strong benefit
to using the substance, we'd advise not to use it," says Torri Metz, an
assistant professor of maternal-fetal medicine at the University of Colorado
Denver.
The smoking gun
Reuters Health reported on a U.S. study which concluded that women who
used both marijuana and cigarettes while pregnant delivered smaller
babies, delivered earlier, experienced asthma as well as pregnancy-related
hypertension (high blood pressure).
The study was conducted to see what effects marijuana alone or in
combination with cigarettes might have on both mother and baby. The
study team analyzed 12,069 women who gave birth between January 2011
and June 2015 at hospitals associated with Baylor College of Medicine.
Of the entire group, just less than one percent (or 106 women) reported
marijuana use while pregnant. Half of this number, 48, said they also
smoked cigarettes while pregnant. Researchers found that women who
smoked both marijuana and cigarettes were more than twice as likely as
women who used neither substance to experience asthma; two and a half
more times as likely to deliver prematurely; two and a half more times to
have pregnancy-related high blood pressure; and nearly three times as
likely to have babies with small heads or low birth weight.
Additionally, the study, reported on in Reuters Health, concluded women
who used both substances were more likely than the others to have
diabetes and high blood pressure before pregnancy. One other study
conclusion is that women who used only tobacco during pregnancy or only
marijuana – and those who used both – were also four to seven times
more likely than women who used neither to have depression or anxiety.
As for every health care practitioner we've interviewed about this topic
over years, the answer is simple: don't smoke weed or cigarettes while
pregnant.
accessHealth interviewed two mothers about smoking marijuana while
pregnant. One smoked both marijuana and cigarettes. Both asked not to
be mentioned by name.
"Linda" said she was extremely depressed throughout her pregnancy.
Although she has never smoked cigarettes, she did smoke marijuana
occasionally (a couple times a month) while pregnant. "It was a way for
me to escape," she said. "It made me feel better about things." She gave
birth to a girl who is now in her preteens. The child has been diagnosed
with a learning disability and resides along the autism spectrum.
"The doctors say they can't know for sure if her condition was due to me
smoking weed," she said. "I feel like it is."
"Candace" is a heavy cigarette smoker and maintained this habit while
pregnant. She also regularly smokes weed – another habit she maintained
while pregnant with all three of her children. When asked if she ever
considered stopping, if nothing else, while she was pregnant, her answer
was emphatic: "No," she said. "You do what you have to do to stay up. I
don't drink, and I don't use hard drugs. My kids are healthy and happy."
It's important to note that two of her three children were low-weight births.
It's also important to note that correlation is not meant to suggest
causation.
Here's what ACOG recommends:
● Before pregnancy and in early pregnancy, all women should be asked
about their use of tobacco, alcohol, and other drugs, including
marijuana and other medications used for nonmedical reasons.
● Women reporting marijuana use should be counseled about concerns
regarding potential adverse health consequences of continued use
during pregnancy.
● Women who are pregnant or contemplating pregnancy should be
encouraged to discontinue marijuana use.
● Pregnant women or women contemplating pregnancy should be
encouraged to discontinue use of marijuana for medicinal purposes in
favor of an alternative therapy for which there are better pregnancy-
specific safety data.
● There are insufficient data to evaluate the effects of marijuana use on
infants during lactation and breastfeeding, and in the absence of such
data, marijuana use is discouraged.
Resources for additional information:
● What You Need to Know About Marijuana Use and Pregnancy
● Smoking, Pregnancy, and Babies
● Marijuana & Pregnancy Risks – Known Effects on Unborn Babies
● Smoking Weed While Pregnant: Is it Dangerous?
(© komokvn - stock.adobe.com)
By Tonia Wright, Publisher/Editor-in-Chief
PAGE 08 April Issue 2021 PAGE 10 April Issue 2021 PAGE 07 April Issue 2021