Study of U.S. hospital figures links pot use with increasing risk of stroke
MONTREAL — New research based on U.S. hospital statistics suggests that recreational cannabis users are increasingly at risk of stroke.
In findings presented Friday at the World Stroke Congress in Montreal, scientists from Avalon University in Curacao used a database covering 1,000 hospitals to analyze trends in stroke prevalence and stroke-related hospital stays among recreational marijuana consumers.
Looking at more than 2.3 million hospitalizations of adult cannabis users from 2010 through 2014, researchers found a steady increase in the number of strokes suffered.
Of the total, 32,231 — or 1.4 per cent — had a stroke, including 19,452 with acute ischemic stroke, which occurs when arteries to the brain narrow or are blocked.


