News | Stroke | March 15, 2017

Marijuana Use Associated with Increased Risk of Stroke, Heart Failure

As marijuana legalization spreads, better understanding of side effects is needed

marijuana use, increased risk, stroke, heart failure, ACC 2017 study

March 15, 2017 — Using marijuana raises the risk of stroke and heart failure even after accounting for demographic factors, other health conditions and lifestyle risk factors such as smoking and alcohol use, according to new research. The study is scheduled for presentation at the American College of Cardiology’s 66th Annual Scientific Session, March 17-19 in Washington, D.C.

Coming at a time when marijuana, medically known as cannabis, is on track to become legal for medical or recreational use in more than half of U.S. states, this study sheds new light on how the drug affects cardiovascular health. While previous marijuana research has focused mostly on pulmonary and psychiatric complications, the new study is one of only a handful to investigate cardiovascular outcomes.

“Like all other drugs, whether they’re prescribed or not prescribed, we want to know the effects and side effects of this drug,” said Aditi Kalla, M.D., Cardiology Fellow at the Einstein Medical Center in Philadelphia and the study’s lead author. “It’s important for physicians to know these effects so we can better educate patients, such as those who are inquiring about the safety of cannabis or even asking for a prescription for cannabis.”

The study drew data from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample, which includes the health records of patients admitted at more than 1,000 hospitals comprising about 20 percent of U.S. medical centers. Researchers extracted records from young and middle-aged patients —age 18-55 years — who were discharged from hospitals in 2009 and 2010, when marijuana use was illegal in most states.

Marijuana use was diagnosed in about 1.5 percent (316,000) of more than 20 million health records included in the analysis. Comparing cardiovascular disease rates in these patients to disease rates in patients not reporting marijuana use, researchers found marijuana use was associated with a significantly increased risk for stroke, heart failure, coronary artery disease and sudden cardiac death.

Marijuana use was also linked with a variety of factors known to increase cardiovascular risk, such as obesity, high blood pressure, smoking and alcohol use. After researchers adjusted the analysis to account for these factors, marijuana use was independently associated with a 26 percent increase in the risk of stroke and a 10 percent increase in the risk of developing heart failure. 

“Even when we corrected for known risk factors, we still found a higher rate of both stroke and heart failure in these patients, so that leads us to believe that there is something else going on besides just obesity or diet-related cardiovascular side effects,” Kalla said. “More research will be needed to understand the pathophysiology behind this effect.”

Research in cell cultures shows that heart muscle cells have cannabis receptors relevant to contractility, or squeezing ability, suggesting that those receptors might be one mechanism through which marijuana use could affect the cardiovascular system. It is possible that other compounds could be developed to counteract that mechanism and reduce cardiovascular risk, Kalla said. 

Because the study was based on hospital discharge records, the findings may not be reflective of the general population. The study was also limited by the researchers’ inability to account for quantity or frequency of marijuana use, purpose of use (recreational or medical), or delivery mechanism (smoking or ingestion).

Kalla suggested that the growing trend toward legalization of marijuana could mean that patients and doctors will become more comfortable speaking openly about marijuana use, which could allow for better data collection and further insights into the drug’s effects and side effects. 

Read the article "Technologies to Reduce Heart Failure Readmissions"

Watch a video interview with Dr. William Abraham of The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center on heart failure technologies from TCT 2016.

For more information: www.acc.org


Related Content

News | Stroke

March 10, 2026 — Medtronic has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Scientia Vascular, a company with critical ...

Home March 12, 2026
Home
News | Stroke

March 11, 2026 — Brainomix, a provider of AI-powered imaging tools for stroke and lung fibrosis, has announced the ...

Home March 11, 2026
Home
News | Stroke

Feb. 6, 2026 — Rapid Medical, a developer of active endovascular devices, has announced the latest results from the ...

Home February 10, 2026
Home
News | Stroke

Feb. 2, 2026 — Brainomix, a provider of AI-powered imaging tools in stroke and lung fibrosis, is introducing its new ...

Home February 02, 2026
Home
News | Stroke

Jan. 13, 2026 — A streamlined, nurse-led response for hospitalized patients experiencing an acute stroke at a Texas ...

Home January 15, 2026
Home
News | Stroke

Dec. 3, 2025 — Recross Cardio Inc., a structural heart company developing next-generation membrane sealing technology ...

Home December 04, 2025
Home
News | Stroke

Dec. 2, 2025 — Brainomix, a provider of AI-powered imaging tools in stroke and lung fibrosis, has announced the ...

Home December 03, 2025
Home
News | Stroke

Nov. 10, 2025 — Sentante, a med-tech robotics company, has successfully demonstrated a first-of-a-kind remote stroke ...

Home November 10, 2025
Home
News | Stroke

Oct. 22, 2025 — Basking Biosciences, a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company developing the first reversible ...

Home October 22, 2025
Home
News | Stroke

Oct. 21, 2025 — At the seventeenth edition of the World Stroke Congress in Barcelona, Siemens Healthineers will present ...

Home October 21, 2025
Home
Subscribe Now