Smoking cannabis can harm unborn babies who were conceived years after their parents stopped using the drug, startling study suggests
- Class B drugs can result in permanent genetic changes in next generation
- Parents’ cannabis use can make children more likely to use the drug themselves
- US scientists say there’s growing evidence drug effects can be passed down
Smoking cannabis may harm children conceived even years after parents stop smoking the drug, a startling study suggests.
Research reveals how using cannabis can trigger permanent genetic changes which make the next generation more likely to abuse drugs themselves.
Scientists say there is growing evidence that adolescent indulgence leaves a lasting genetic imprint – which is passed down to children through altered DNA in sperm and egg.
Our genes can be subtly altered by what we experience in life – such as food we eat or the stresses we absorb.
Smoking cannabis may harm children conceived even years after parents stop smoking the drug, a startling study suggests
These ‘epigenetic’ changes can then affect our health and how we behave. They can also be passed on to our children.
Dr Henrietta Szutorisz, of Icahn Medical School in New York, fed adolescent rats water containing THC, the main psychoactive compound in cannabis.
They were later taken off the substance and encouraged to mate. Their offspring were left to grow up without exposure to THC.
However, when adult, they were found to crave a solution containing heroin more than offspring of ‘clean’ rats.
Scientists say there is growing evidence that adolescent indulgence leaves a lasting genetic imprint – which is passed down to children through altered DNA in sperm and egg
Writing in journal Neuroscience and Biobehavioural Reviews, she said that while it was ‘still a provocative concept’, the data ‘accrued to date … documents that early exposure [to cannabis] during one’s lifetime leaves a long-term epigenetic memory mark which sets a legacy even on to future generations’.
Researchers at King’s College London have shown smoking cigarettes in pregnancy triggers genetic changes in the unborn child, which make them more likely to smoke and use cannabis as teens.
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