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WSU study: Cannabis use may diminish stress response

Researchers with Washington State University have found cannabis use may diminish a user’s physiological response to stress in a study published recently in the journal Neurobiology of Stress.

Cannabis use blunts stress reactivity in female rats

 E-Mail Female rats that inhaled vaporized cannabis daily for a month developed a blunted physiological response to stress, according to a new study by Washington State University researchers. In contrast, male rats that were provided access to the same potency of cannabis over the same 30-day window did not experience any physiological changes in how they responded to a stressful situation. The results of the study, published in the journal Neurobiology of Stress, indicate there may be significant differences in how chronic cannabis use affects males and females. The WSU scientists work also establishes a direct, experimental relationship between chronic cannabis use and dampened stress reactivity.

Cannabis use dampens physiological response to stress in female rats

Cannabis use dampens physiological response to stress in female rats Female rats that inhaled vaporized cannabis daily for a month developed a blunted physiological response to stress, according to a new study by Washington State University researchers. In contrast, male rats that were provided access to the same potency of cannabis over the same 30-day window did not experience any physiological changes in how they responded to a stressful situation. The results of the study, published in the journal Neurobiology of Stress, indicate there may be significant differences in how chronic cannabis use affects males and females. The WSU scientists work also establishes a direct, experimental relationship between chronic cannabis use and dampened stress reactivity.

Cannabis use blunts stress reactivity in female rats | WSU Insider | Washington State University

December 22, 2020 By Will Ferguson, WSU News Female rats that inhaled vaporized cannabis daily for a month developed a blunted physiological response to stress, according to a new study by Washington State University researchers. In contrast, male rats that were provided access to the same potency of cannabis over the same 30-day window did not experience any physiological changes in how they responded to a stressful situation. The results of the study, published in the journal Neurobiology of Stress, indicate there may be significant differences in how chronic cannabis use affects males and females. The WSU scientists’ work also establishes a direct, experimental relationship between chronic cannabis use and dampened stress reactivity.

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