Marijuana use in pregnency and autism
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Using marijuana in pregnancy may heighten baby's risk of autism
In an analysis of data from more than 500,000 Canadian mothers and their children, researchers found a 50 percent increase in the risk of autism spectrum disorder in kids whose mothers had used cannabis while pregnant, according to the report, published Monday in Nature Medicine.
“Cannabis is not a benign drug and any use during pregnancy should be discouraged,” the study’s lead author, Daniel Corsi, an adjunct professor at the University of Ottawa and a scientist at the Children’s Hospital of Ontario Research Institute, said.
“We know that cannabinoids can cross placental tissue and enter the fetal bloodstream,” Corsi said. “There are cannabinoid receptors present in the developing fetus and exposure to cannabis may impact the wiring of the developing brain.”
While it’s known that substance use in pregnant women can affect a fetus’s neurodevelopment, the question of whether cannabis use is a risk factor for autism has not been thoroughly investigated, Daniele Fallin, director of the Wendy King Center for Autism and Developmental Disabilities at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said in an email.
Fallin, who was not involved with the new research, said that the observational study cannot prove that cannabis use by pregnant women causes autism. “This is an interesting first step, but much more work is needed to implicate maternal cannabis use specifically in autism risk,” she added.
To take a closer look at possible neurodevelopmental impacts of cannabis on developing fetuses, Corsi and his colleagues reviewed data from all Ontario births that occurred from 2007 to 2012, which was before the drug was legalized in Canada. Their final analysis included 503,065 children, 3,148 of whom had mothers who used cannabis while pregnant.
The children were followed for an average of seven years, during which 7,125 were diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder. The rate of autism diagnoses among children with in utero cannabis exposure was 2.2 percent, as compared to 1.4 percent in those whose mothers did not use the drug during pregnancy.
When the researchers accounted for factors that might skew their results, they found that the risk of autism was increased by 50 percent when mothers used cannabis during pregnancy.
"This finding gives some clues that exposure to cannabis in utero is associated with autism, but many questions remain,” Ziva Cooper, interim director at the UCLA Cannabis Research Initiative, said in an email. She noted that the women in the study were asked to self-report cannabis use, and only asked about it at one point early in their pregnancy.
Still, “these are important findings given the increase of cannabis use in pregnant women,” Cooper, who was not involved with the new research, said.
Last summer, research from Kaiser Permanente Northern California found that cannabis use is on the rise among pregnant women in the U.S. The percentage of women who used the drug while pregnant rose from 1.9 percent in 2009 to 3.4 percent in 2017.
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DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity
“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman
Or people who suffer from anxiety are more likely to
A) be on the spectrum
B) take marijuana.
And autism does run in families.
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A large Canadian study found an association between maternal cannabis use during pregnancy and autism spectrum disorder in babies.
The study, published Monday in Nature Medicine, involved an analysis of all live births in Ontario from April 2007 to March 2012, before recreational cannabis was legalized in Canada. The study notes that cannabis use during pregnancy has increased.
Of half a million women in the study, 3,000, or 0.6%, reported using cannabis during pregnancy, according to a hospital press release on the study.
Specifically, researchers found that women who used cannabis during pregnancy were 1.5 times more likely to have a child with autism, per Forbes.
“The incidence of intellectual disability and learning disorders was higher among offspring of mothers who use cannabis in pregnancy, although less statistically robust,” the study authors wrote.
In a separate study conducted by the same researchers, they previously found that cannabis use in pregnancy was linked to an increased risk of preterm birth. The women involved in that study often used other substances like tobacco, alcohol, and opioids.
"Considering those findings, in the current study the researchers specifically looked at 2,200 women who reported using only cannabis during pregnancy, and no other substances. They found that babies born to this group still had an increased risk of autism compared to those who did not use cannabis," per the press release.
Source: Marijuana use during pregnancy associated with autism in babies, study finds
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Author of Practical Preparations for a Coronavirus Pandemic.
A very unique plan. As Dr. Paul Thompson wrote, "This is the very best paper on the virus I have ever seen."
This study does not mean marijuana use is a cause of autism ans is not useful in the nature vs nurture debate about autism. There are so many biases possible in this kind of study.
You may consider, as I do that autism is genetically inherited and that an autistic mother are very more likely to give birth to an autistic child.
Autistic people are more anxious and so more prone to take anxiolytic substance like marijuana. marijuana contains cannabidiol which is well known to be helpful for many autistic people (the problem is many other components are clearly detrimental).
As well an autistic morther is more likely to have a preterm birth.
As well, you may suppose that an autistic mother is more likely to report that she has used cannabis during her pregnancy and that a neurotypical mother is more more likely to lie (more aware of social consequences of telling that).
As I noted in the title "One Cause".
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Author of Practical Preparations for a Coronavirus Pandemic.
A very unique plan. As Dr. Paul Thompson wrote, "This is the very best paper on the virus I have ever seen."
But correlation can become one of the cornerstones of causation, the bit of light shinning in the darkness.
I guess from my perspective, it may be the other way around. IMHO Aspies endure significantly more stress than the average NTs. As a result they may utilize marijuana at a much higher rate than the average NT. They find it useful in trying to blend into society. It becomes a crutch and the difference in brain structure may make it more addicted to us than the average NT.
So maybe the high correlation of marijuana use may be indicative of genetic variance of autism as it passes down from one generation to the next. Autism is primarily genetic. But it is genetic plus something else.
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Author of Practical Preparations for a Coronavirus Pandemic.
A very unique plan. As Dr. Paul Thompson wrote, "This is the very best paper on the virus I have ever seen."
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