Jessica usually smokes cannabis five days a week, mostly at the end of the day, often while reading. “Why do some people drink alcohol?” she said. “It’s a way to come down after a hectic day. I treat it more like a beer with dinner.”
But one morning late this winter, she smoked a cigarette rolled with government-grown cannabis while lying with her head inside a scanner that recorded images of a radioactive tracer’s path through her brain. “Cannabis has been illegal and impossible to study,” said Jessica, a 25-year-old graduate student. “The more we know about it, the more we understand how it affects us. It’s not something that’s going to go away.”
Even as the federal government treats the possession and use of cannabis as illegal for any purpose, 29 states now allow medical use of the drug, and nine states have authorized it for recreational purposes. This new and rapidly evolving legal landscape arrives with many unknowns, not the least of which is how, precisely, this popular illicit drug affects people’s brains and behavior.
Jessica, not her real name, was one of the first subjects participating in a study funded by Women’s Health Research at Yale using a new brain scanning technique to examine for the first time how smoking cannabis affects the brains of women and men.
About half of all Americans have tried cannabis, with 22 million reporting they have used it at least once in the last month. Use of the drug is particularly common among adolescents and young adults, whose brains are still developing.
And newer generations of cannabis users are consuming the drug with a potency that has greatly increased over the years. In confiscated samples of cannabis, the average content of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the major psychoactive ingredient, climbed from 4 percent in the early 1990s to 12 percent in 2014.
Varieties available in flower form at Connecticut dispensaries — sold with a doctor’s certification to patients with qualifying diagnoses such as cancer, glaucoma, AIDS, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, epilepsy, and post-traumatic stress disorder — can have THC contents well above 25 percent. Concentrated forms such as oils and resins approach and exceed 90 percent THC. Other varieties are lower in THC and higher in other compounds, such as cannabidiol (CBD), which has been used to calm anxiety and suppress seizures, particularly in children, without a psychoactive effect.