Cannabis
- Also called marijuana, gunja, yarndi, dope, pot, weed
- Commonly mixed with tobacco
Synthetic cannabis is not a cannabinoid related chemical. It may cause severe toxicity and stimulant effects — agitation, paranoia, psychosis, seizures, hyperthermia.
Effects of cannabis
- Cannabis and tobacco smoke damage lungs, reduce physical fitness
- Worse if smoked together or inhaled through water (bong)
Vulnerable populations
- Existing mental health condition — may make symptoms worse or reduce response to medicines — see Mental health emergency and Mental health assessment
- Pregnant — increased risk of low birth weight babies, risk of neonatal withdrawal syndrome — see Postnatal care of baby and Brief interventions
- Young people are at risk of greater harm — leaving school, homelessness, social vulnerabilities
Cannabis hyperemesis syndrome
- Occurs in regular daily long term user
- Causes nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps — partially relieved by hot showers
- May be severe and cause dehydration and electrolyte disturbance
- Usually resolves in days when stop cannabis use but likely to recur if cannabis used again
Intoxication
- Relaxed, happy
- Confused or aggressive
- Reduced coordination and driving impairment
- Panic, feel anxious or paranoid (everyone is against them)
- Cannabis hyperemesis syndrome
Acute psychosis
- Have delusions (believe things that are not true), hallucinations (see or hear things that are not there), strange/disorganised thoughts or behaviour
- Symptoms usually stop soon after intoxication subsides but can have symptoms for weeks or months
Long-term health effects
- Chronic lung disease, reduced physical fitness
- Often causes problems with memory, concentration, motivation
- Decreased ability to organise and learn complex information
- Increased risk of oral issues due to dry mouth
Do
- All cannabis users should be offered help to stop — see Brief interventions
- Special effort should be made if
- History or family history of mental illness
- Pregnant or breastfeeding
- Person experiencing long-term effects on health and wellbeing
Managing cannabis cessation or withdrawal
- When person who is dependent stops or cuts down they may get withdrawal symptoms — trouble sleeping, cranky feelings, hostility
- Can start within 24 hours of stopping use. Peaks around 4–10 days, last several weeks
- May increase risk of violence, self-harm, suicide
- Can cause cannabis hyperemesis syndrome
- Cannabis users may also have tobacco dependency
- Gradual reduction of cannabis use can be effective in stopping use without need for medicine
- If pre-existing psychotic illness — usual antipsychotic medicine may need to be adjusted
Do
- Medical consult about medicines — give until agitation settled and review daily
- Diazepam oral — adult 5–10mg/dose up to 20mg/day
- Avoid using diazepam daily for more than 1 week — may lead to tolerance/dependence
- If agitation not settled by diazepam — give olanzapine oral — adult 5–10mg/dose up to 20mg/day
- Antiemetic for nausea or vomiting — see Nausea and vomiting — check for signs of dehydration and low potassium
- Make management plan
- Refer to drug and alcohol service or mental health team for support