Running High: Cannabis Users' Subjective Experience of Exercise During Legal Market Cannabis Use Versus No Use in a Naturalistic Setting.

IF 3.1 4区 医学 Q2 PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY
Cannabis and Cannabinoid Research Pub Date : 2024-08-01 Epub Date: 2023-07-13 DOI:10.1089/can.2022.0338
Laurel P Gibson, Angela D Bryan
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: The use of cannabis with various forms of exercise (e.g., running) has received increased media attention in recent years, contradicting the popular stereotype that cannabis is associated with sedentary behavior. Although cross-sectional evidence suggests a positive association between cannabis use and exercise engagement, to date, the acute effects of cannabis on exercise remain unclear. Methods: The present within-subjects crossover study compared participants' experiences of running after ad libitum use of legal market cannabis (cannabis run) to running without cannabis (non-cannabis run) in a real-world setting. Participants (n=49) were cannabis users between the ages of 21 and 49 years (mean=30.82, standard deviation [SD]=6.21). The majority of participants were male (61.5%) and non-Hispanic White (81.6%). Results: Participants (n=49) ran an average of 3.88 miles (SD=2.28) during their cannabis and non-cannabis runs. Although participants ran an average of 31 seconds/mile slower during their cannabis run, this difference was not statistically significant (p=0.12). Participants reported experiencing (1) less negative affect (p=0.03), (2) greater feelings of positive affect (p<0.001), tranquility (p=0.004), enjoyment (p=0.004), and dissociation (p=0.001), and (3) more runner's high symptoms (p<0.001) during their cannabis (vs. non-cannabis) runs. Participants also reported lower pain levels after their cannabis (vs. non-cannabis) run (p=0.03). Perceived exertion did not differ between runs (p=0.33). Cannabis form, cannabinoid content, and feelings of "high" were largely unrelated to participants' experience of exercise while under the influence of cannabis. Conclusions: Results suggest that acute cannabis use may be associated with a more positive exercise experience among regular cannabis users. Research using varied methodologies, a range of exercise modalities, and diverse populations is needed to establish the long-term harms and benefits associated with this behavior, as well as the generalizability of these findings to other populations and settings.

跑得很嗨:大麻使用者在合法市场吸食大麻与不吸食大麻期间在自然环境中运动的主观体验。
背景:近年来,使用大麻进行各种形式的锻炼(如跑步)越来越受到媒体的关注,这与人们普遍认为大麻与久坐不动有关的刻板印象相矛盾。尽管横断面证据表明使用大麻与参与运动之间存在正相关,但迄今为止,大麻对运动的急性影响仍不清楚。研究方法:本受试者内交叉研究比较了参与者在真实世界环境中随意吸食合法市场大麻后跑步(吸食大麻跑步)和不吸食大麻跑步(不吸食大麻跑步)的体验。参与者(49 人)均为大麻使用者,年龄在 21 岁至 49 岁之间(平均年龄为 30.82 岁,标准差 [SD]=6.21 岁)。大多数参与者为男性(61.5%)和非西班牙裔白人(81.6%)。结果参与者(人数=49)在吸食大麻和不吸食大麻的跑步过程中平均跑了 3.88 英里(标准差=2.28)。虽然参与者在吸食大麻的跑步过程中平均每英里慢了 31 秒,但这一差异在统计学上并不显著(P=0.12)。据参与者报告,他们经历了(1)较少的消极情绪(p=0.03),(2)较多的积极情绪(pp=0.004)、享受(p=0.004)和分离(p=0.001),以及(3)较多的跑步兴奋症状(pp=0.03)。在不同的跑步过程中,感觉到的体力消耗没有差异(p=0.33)。大麻形式、大麻素含量和 "兴奋 "感觉与参与者在大麻影响下的运动体验基本无关。结论:研究结果表明,在经常吸食大麻的人群中,急性吸食大麻可能与更积极的运动体验有关。需要使用各种方法、各种运动方式和不同人群进行研究,以确定这种行为的长期危害和益处,以及这些研究结果对其他人群和环境的普遍适用性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Cannabis and Cannabinoid Research
Cannabis and Cannabinoid Research PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY-
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
7.90%
发文量
164
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