City
Epaper

Study shows how weed use may raise cancer risk

By IANS | Updated: November 14, 2024 13:25 IST

New Delhi, Nov 14 Cannabis consumption can cause damage to our body's cells and increase the risk of ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Nov 14 Cannabis consumption can cause damage to our body's cells and increase the risk of highly cancerous tumours, according to a new study on Thursday.

In the study, published in the scientific journal Addiction Biology, cannabis is described as a “genotoxic” substance because it damages a cell's genetic information. This can lead to DNA mutations, accelerated ageing, and cancer.

Alarmingly, this genotoxicity can be passed on to the next generation via a damaged egg and sperm -- making the risk of cannabis use trans-generational, said the researchers from the University of Western Australia.

In the study, the team also linked established knowledge that cannabis use damages cellular energy production by inhibiting mitochondria with recent cancer research showing that mitochondrial dysfunction drives chromosomal damage which can surge rates of cancer, accelerated ageing, and birth defects.

“The link we’ve described between cannabis use and genotoxicity has far-reaching consequences. This new research shows how genetic damage from cannabis use can be passed down the generations,” said Dr. Stuart Reece from the varsity

Cannabis has been known to be linked with both micronuclear development and mitochondrial inhibition for many decades.

Both human and rodent studies show that adult cannabis exposure is linked with the incidence of autism and cerebral processing difficulties in children prenatally exposed.

However, the study argued that cannabinoid genotoxicity has long been “overlooked”.

The researchers noted that “it may, in fact, be all around us through the rapid induction of ageing of eggs, sperm, zygotes, foetus and adult organisms with many lines of evidence demonstrating transgenerational impacts”.

Together, the data is clear and robust evidence for the transgenerational transmission of major genotoxic outcomes.

In light of this, Reece called on policymakers to “reframe the discussion surrounding cannabis legalisation from a personal choice to one that potentially involves multiple subsequent generations.”

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalPoster controversy: Police disperse protestors in Jaipur, say situation under control

NationalGujarat: Vadodara woman duped of Rs 5.61 lakh in visa scam, complaint filed

NationalRetaliatory actions against Pak reflect India’s strong policy against those promoting terror: Raksha Khadse

AurangabadFamily booked in another illegal moneylending case

Aurangabad155 wedding guests suffer food poisoning in Kannad tehsil

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyIndia sees robust 10.35 pc annual growth in domestic airline passengers in FY25

TechnologyIDFC FIRST Bank posts nearly 60 pc net profit loss at Rs 295.6 crore in Q4 FY25

TechnologyScreening for both active and dormant TB infection key to improve detection: Study

TechnologyMinister Ashish Sood outlines plan to make Delhi a 'credible medical destination'

TechnologyComponent PLI a key milestone in India's electronics manufacturing ecosystem: Industry