Gut Check: Does Marijuana Use and CBD Affect the Gut?

10/28/2022
Photo: Jeremy Pawlowski/Stocksy; iStock
In recent years there’s been a growing interest in the use of cannabis — both marijuana and CBD products — to help treat a number of health conditions, including gastrointestinal disorders.
Some cannabis products are marketed as a method to help ease health conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), as well as Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis, both forms of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).
And people with these conditions have taken note. A study published in August 2018 in the Journal of Pediatrics found that nearly a third of the adolescents and young adults with IBD surveyed had used marijuana. Of these, 57 percent endorsed its use for at least one medical reason (most popularly to help with pain).
But do these claims hold any merit or are they just hype? Here, we break down what the science says about cannabis use and its effect on the gut.
Understanding How Cannabis Works in the Body
Cannabis refers to all of the products derived from the plant Cannabis sativa. This plant contains more than a hundred substances called cannabinoids. The two most common cannabinoids are CBD (cannabidiol) and THC (tetrahydrocannabinol). THC has psychoactive effects that make people feel “high,” while CBD does not.
Both THC and CBD are being studied for medical benefits because of their effects on the endocannabinoid system, a complex network of chemical signals and cell receptors that naturally occur in the body.
“The endocannabinoid system was discovered in the 1990s, and researchers were able to see that cannabinoids act at multiple receptors throughout the body, with two main receptors called the cannabinoid receptor one (CB1) and cannabinoid receptor two (CB2),” says Jami Kinnucan, MD, senior associate consultant in the section of gastroenterology and hepatology at Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Florida. “So that's why we can maybe hypothesize that they [cannabinoids] might have impacts in various medical conditions and/or symptoms.”
CB1 receptors are mainly in the brain and central nervous system, while CB2 receptors are found throughout the rest of the body, including the digestive tract.
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