Doctors, nurses and anesthesiologists in Colorado have noticed that marijuana use may affect a patient's responses to both anesthesia and recovery from surgery.
By Kate Ruder, Kaiser Health News
When Colorado legalized marijuana, it became a pioneer in creating new policies to deal with the drug.
Now
the state’s surgeons, nurses and anesthesiologists are becoming
pioneers of a different sort in understanding what weed may do to
patients who go under the knife.
Their
observations and initial research show that marijuana use may affect
patients’ responses to anesthesia on the operating table — and,
depending on the patient’s history of using the drug, either help or
hinder their symptoms afterward in the recovery room.
Colorado
makes for an interesting laboratory. Since the state legalized
marijuana for medicine in 2000 and allowed for its recreational sale in
2014, more Coloradans are using it — and they may also be more willing
to tell their doctors about it.
Roughly 17 percent of Coloradans said they used marijuana
in the previous 30 days in 2017, according to the National Survey on
Drug Use and Health, more than double the 8 percent who reported doing
so in 2006. By comparison, just 9 percent of U.S. residents said they
used marijuana in 2017.
“It has been destigmatized here in Colorado,” said Dr. Andrew Monte,
an associate professor of emergency medicine and medical toxicology at
the University of Colorado School of Medicine and UCHealth. “We’re ahead
of the game in terms of our ability to talk to patients about it. We’re
also ahead of the game in identifying complications associated with
use.”
One small study of Colorado patients published in May found marijuana users required more than triple the amount of one common sedation medicine, propofol, as did nonusers.
Those
findings and anecdotal reports are prompting additional questions from
the study’s author, Dr. Mark Twardowski, and others in the state’s
medical field: If pot users indeed need more anesthesia, are there
increased risks for breathing problems during minor procedures? Are
there higher costs with the use of more medication, if a second or third
bottle of anesthesia must be routinely opened? And what does regular
cannabis use mean for recovery post-surgery?
But
much is still unknown about marijuana’s impact on patients because it
remains illegal on the federal level, making studies difficult to fund
or undertake.
It’s even difficult to
quantify how many of the estimated 800,000 to 1 million anesthesia
procedures that are performed in Colorado each year involve marijuana
users, according to Dr. Joy Hawkins, a professor of anesthesiology at the University of Colorado School of Medicine and president of the Colorado Society of Anesthesiologists. The Colorado Hospital Association said it doesn’t track anesthesia needs or costs specific to marijuana users.
As
more states legalize cannabis to varying degrees, discussions about the
drug are happening elsewhere, too. On a national level, the American
Association of Nurse Anesthetists recently updated its clinical guidelines
to highlight potential risks for and needs of marijuana users. American
Society of Anesthesiologists spokeswoman Theresa Hill said that the use
of marijuana in managing pain is a topic under discussion but that more
research is needed. This year, it endorsed a federal bill calling for fewer regulatory barriers on marijuana research.
Why should patients disclose marijuana use?
No
matter where patients live, though, many nurses and doctors from around
the country agree: Patients should disclose marijuana use before any
surgery or procedure. Linda Stone, a certified registered nurse
anesthetist in Raleigh, N.C., acknowledged that patients in states where
marijuana is illegal might be more hesitant.
“We
really don’t want patients to feel like there’s stigma. They really do
need to divulge that information,” Stone said. “We are just trying to
make sure that we provide the safest care.”
In
Colorado, Hawkins said, anesthesiologists have noticed that patients
who use marijuana are more tolerant of some common anesthesia drugs,
such as propofol, which helps people fall asleep during general
anesthesia or stay relaxed during conscious “twilight” sedation. But
higher doses can increase potentially serious side effects such as low
blood pressure and depressed heart function.
We are just trying to make sure that we provide the safest care.
Limited
airway flow is another issue for people who smoke marijuana. “It acts
very much like cigarettes, so it makes your airway irritated,” she said.
To
be sure, anesthesia must be adjusted to accommodate patients of all
sorts, apart from cannabis use.
Anesthesiologists are prepared to adapt
and make procedures safe for all patients, Hawkins said. And in some
emergency surgeries, patients might not be in a position to disclose
their cannabis use ahead of time.
Even
when they do, a big challenge for medical professionals is gauging the
amounts of marijuana consumed, as the potency varies widely from one
joint to the next or when ingested through marijuana edibles. And levels
of THC, the chemical with psychoactive effects in marijuana, have been
increasing in the past few decades.
“For marijuana, it’s a bit of the Wild West,” Hawkins said. “We just don’t know what’s in these products that they’re using.”
Marijuana’s effects on pain after surgery
Colorado
health providers are also observing how marijuana changes patients’
symptoms after they leave the operating suite — particularly relevant
amid the ongoing opioid epidemic.
“We’ve been hearing reports about patients using cannabis, instead of opioids, to treat their postoperative pain,” said Dr. Mark Steven Wallace,
chair of the pain medicine division in the anesthesiology department at
the University of California-San Diego, in a state that also has
legalized marijuana. “I have a lot of patients who say they prefer it.”
Matthew
Sheahan, 25, of Denver, said he used marijuana to relieve pain after
the removal of his wisdom teeth four years ago. After surgery, he smoked
marijuana rather than using the ibuprofen prescribed but didn’t
disclose this to his doctor because pot was illegal in Ohio, where he
had the procedure. He said his doctor told him his swelling was greatly
reduced. “I didn’t experience the pain that I thought I would,” Sheahan
said.
In
a study underway, Wallace is working with patients who’ve recently had
surgery for joint replacement to see whether marijuana can be used to
treat pain and reduce the need for opioids.
But
this may be a Catch-22 for regular marijuana users. They reported
feeling greater pain and consumed more opioids in the hospital after
vehicle crash injuries compared with nonusers, according to a study
published last year in the journal Patient Safety in Surgery.
“The
hypothesis is that chronic marijuana users develop a tolerance to pain
medications, and since they do not receive marijuana while in the
hospital, they require a higher replacement dose of opioids," said Dr.
David Bar-Or, who directs trauma research at Swedish Medical Center in
Englewood, Colo., and several other hospitals in Colorado, Texas,
Missouri and Kansas. He is studying a synthetic form of THC called
dronabinol as a potential substitute for opioids in the hospital.
Again, much more research is needed.
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