Study explains whether drinking alcohol or smoking weed does more long term damage

WHY IT MATTERS: If you are weighing the risks of cannabis versus alcohol for symptom management, understanding that alcohol carries substantially higher risks for organ damage, dependence, and death can help you and your clinician make more informed treatment decisions. CLINICAL OVERVIEW: Comparing the long-term health consequences of alcohol and cannabis is a clinically important discussion, as alcohol carries well-documented risks including liver disease, cardiovascular damage, neurotoxicity, and a strong association with dependence and mortality, while cannabis, though not without risk, has a significantly lower profile for organ damage and fatal overdose. In my clinical experience with over 30,000 patients, cannabis can be problematic for certain populations, particularly adolescents and those predisposed to psychiatric conditions, but the aggregate body burden of chronic alcohol use far exceeds that of regulated cannabis use in adults.

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Teen Cannabis Use Tied to Increase in Serious Mental Illness – Medscape

WHY IT MATTERS: If you are a parent or caregiver of a teen, or a young person using cannabis yourself, this research reinforces that delaying use until the brain is more fully developed, typically into the mid-20s, is one of the most important harm reduction strategies available. CLINICAL OVERVIEW: Emerging research continues to reinforce what clinicians have observed for years: adolescent cannabis use, particularly during critical neurodevelopmental windows, is associated with a meaningful increase in risk for serious psychiatric conditions including psychotic and bipolar disorders. The developing brain remains uniquely vulnerable to exogenous cannabinoids, and the endocannabinoid system plays a central role in synaptic pruning and neural circuit maturation during the teenage years.

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