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As marijuana use becomes more common in the United States, we are learning more about its
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long-term impacts, with a new study now shedding light on how it compares to tobacco use
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The study, out of the University of California, San Francisco, looked at the impacts of smoking
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and ingesting THC, the compound in marijuana causing the high feeling, on the cardiovascular
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system. It found a link between impaired blood vessel function and both smoking marijuana and
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consuming THC-laced edibles. Impaired blood vessel function increases the risk of having a heart
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attack. Researchers found healthy people who smoked or consumed THC regularly showed early
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signs of cardiovascular disease, similar to tobacco smokers. They say vascular function
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was reduced by 42 percent in marijuana smokers and 56 percent in THC edible users. In 2016
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an American Heart Association study found exposure to marijuana smoke damages blood vessels supplying
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oxygen to vital organs. But this new study is the first to look at its impact on the vascular system
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as a whole. A different study published in March found cannabis users under the age of 50 are six
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times more likely to have a heart attack and face double the chance of heart failure. The researchers
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behind this new study did say, however, that correlation does not equal causation, meaning
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that while their findings show a strong link between THC and cardiovascular damage, they don't
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prove it's a sole cause. For all the latest health headlines, download the Straight Arrow News app