Tashkin Donald P, Baldwin Gayle C, Sarafian Theodore, Dubinett Steven, Roth Michael D
Deportment of Medicine, UCLA School of Medicine, 90095-1690, USA.
J Clin Pharmacol. 2002 Nov;42(S1):71S-81S. doi: 10.1002/j.1552-4604.2002.tb06006.x.
Habitual smoking of marijuana has a number of effects on the respiratory and immune systems that may be clinically relevant. These include alterations in lung function ranging from no to mild airflow obstruction without evidence of diffusion impairment, an increased prevalence of acute and chronic bronchitis, striking endoscopic findings of airway injury (erythema, edema, and increased secretions) that correlate with histopathological alterations in bronchial biopsies, and dysregulated growth of the bronchial epithelium associated with altered expression of nuclear and cytoplasmic proteins involved in the pathogenesis of bronchogenic carcinoma. Other consequences of regular marijuana use include ultrastructual abnormalities in human alveolar macrophages along with impairment of their cytokine production, antimicrobial activity, and tumoricidal function. Cannabinoid receptor expression is altered in leukocytes collected from the blood of chronic smokers, and experimental models support a role for delta9-tetrahydrocannabinol in suppressing T cell function and cell-mediated immunity. The potential for marijuana smoking to predispose to the development of respiratory malignancy is suggested by several lines of evidence, including the presence of potent carcinogens in marijuana smoke and their resulting deposition in the lung, the occurrence of premalignant changes in bronchial biopsies obtained from smokers of marijuana in the absence of tobacco, impairment of antitumor immune defenses by delta9-tetrahydrocannabinol, and several clinical case series in which marijuana smokers were disproportionately over represented among young individuals who developed upper or lower respiratory tract cancer. Additional well designed epidemiological and immune monitoring studies are required to determine the potential causal relationship between marijuana use and the development of respiratory infection and/or cancer.
习惯性吸食大麻会对呼吸系统和免疫系统产生一系列可能具有临床相关性的影响。这些影响包括肺功能改变,从无气流阻塞到轻度气流阻塞,且无弥散功能障碍的证据;急慢性支气管炎患病率增加;气道损伤的显著内镜检查结果(红斑、水肿和分泌物增多),这与支气管活检的组织病理学改变相关;以及支气管上皮生长失调,与参与支气管源性癌发病机制的核蛋白和细胞质蛋白表达改变有关。经常使用大麻的其他后果包括人类肺泡巨噬细胞的超微结构异常,以及其细胞因子产生、抗菌活性和杀肿瘤功能受损。从慢性吸烟者血液中采集的白细胞中,大麻素受体表达发生改变,实验模型支持δ9 - 四氢大麻酚在抑制T细胞功能和细胞介导免疫方面的作用。有几条证据表明吸食大麻可能易引发呼吸道恶性肿瘤,包括大麻烟雾中存在强效致癌物及其在肺部的沉积、在不吸烟的大麻吸食者的支气管活检中出现癌前病变、δ9 - 四氢大麻酚对抗肿瘤免疫防御的损害,以及几个临床病例系列,其中在患上下呼吸道癌症的年轻人中,大麻吸食者的比例过高。需要进行更多精心设计 的流行病学和免疫监测研究,以确定使用大麻与呼吸道感染和/或癌症发生之间的潜在因果关系。