rates of cannabis use across all age groups have increased by 7.3% since legalization, with many users perceiving it as natural and therefore safe. however, the evidence used to assess cannabis safety and toxicity has an important limitation; most people consume cannabis by inhalation, while most of the research to date has involved injecting rodents to study cannabis’ effects.
dr. robert laprairie
and his research team changed that by developing a new approach to studying cannabis exposure via inhalation.
they purchased special smoke chambers designed to study the effects of cannabis smoke inhalation in pregnant rats. using cannabis products found in local stores, dr. laprairie and his team found that cannabis smoke inhalation — while not benign — resulted in no large-scale changes in markers of maternal or fetal health.
this contrasts with previous assessments using injection models, where the effects were much more severe.
with his
future leaders in canadian brain research
grant, the team is now tracking the long-term learning and development of the rat pups exposed to cannabis smoke in utero. so far they’re seeing deficits in memory, as well as deficits in attention scoring, in the pups exposed to high thc cannabis in utero.