Cannabis Users Are Less Overweight Than Non-Users: A Study

Cannabis Users Are Less Overweight Than Non-Users: A Study

New research challenges the munchies stereotype.

If you were to guess based on stereotypes alone, you might assume that cannabis users—after years of late-night “munchies” expeditions to the supermarket snack isle—would be more overweight, on average, than non-users. But new research indicates it’s actually the other way around, reports Marijuana Moment. 

According to a study from Indiana University, regular cannabis users are on average less overweight than those who don’t use cannabis at all. This research is still waiting on a peer-review process and has not yet been published. But it’s a finding that already aligns with published research from the past.

Last year, a study from Oregon’s Health and Science University discovered that heavy cannabis users had a lower average body mass index compared to those who have never used cannabis. In a near direct refutation of common “lazy stoner” stereotypes, the study also found that frequent cannabis users did more physical activity each day on average compared to occasional or non-users.

In 2014, another study from Canadian researchers found the same thing, also noting that cannabis use was associated with lower risks of diabetes.

The following year, researchers from the University of Miami again found similar results: females who consume cannabis every day have a body mass index that’s roughly 3.1% lower than non-users; males who consume cannabis on the daily have a body mass index roughly 2.7% lower than their non-using peers.

Why Marijuana Consumers Have Smaller Waistlines Than Non Users Cannabis Users Are Less Overweight Than Non Users: A Study
Photo by Juthawat Putharat / EyeEm via Getty Images

The latest research from Indiana University finds that cannabis consumption’s impact on weight has to do with the way cannabis interacts with the body’s cannabinoid receptors.

The researchers write that a diet containing a high ratio of omega-6 to omega-3 fatty acids—common in the United States and other Western countries—contributes to obesity by overstimulating our cannabinoid type 1 receptor (CB1). The overstimulation of this receptor leads to “increased caloric intake, reduced metabolic rates, and weight gain.”

Cannabis consumption, however, suppresses the stimulation of the CB1 receptor—a process known as “downregulation”—essentially reversing that process, according to the researchers. This also results in the reduction of energy intake and storage and an increase of metabolic rates.

Medications which bind to cannabinoid receptors and prevent their activation—known as cannabinoid receptor antagonists—have been developed for the purpose of weight loss. However, some of these products—like Rimonabant, an anti-obesity medication first released in 2006 before being withdrawn in 2008—have shown to produce serious side effects.

While the researchers still call this explanation theoretical, it provides the basis for more research into cannabis as a potential weight loss treatment. “For many patients, cannabis may be a better option for weight loss than surgery or pharmaceuticals,” write the researchers.

By ROB HOFFMAN

Read more from the source: Herb.co

Photo by PEDRO PARDO/AFP via Getty Images

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