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Coumadin, or warfarin, is a kind of anti-coagulant. It prevents the blood from coagulating, or clotting.
Cannabis can also act as an anticoagulant, so patients often wonder, can I use marijuana if I’m taking blood thinners?
Usually, yes, but caution should be exercised.
Most patients taking blood thinners can use cannabis without ill effects. However, these patients should use caution and consume marijuana under the guidance of an experienced healthcare provider.
Here are some of the things to know about mixing weed and blood thinners like warfarin or coumadin.
A 2007 study published in Phytomedicine showed cannabis, especially cannabinoids THC and CBN, act as anti-coagulants. The same study showed CBD had mild anti-coagulating effects.
Additionally, some blood thinners, like Coumadin, or warfarin, utilize metabolic pathway CYP450. Cannabis utilizes the same pathway. In some patients, this can cause a drug interaction and increase the amount of medication in the blood.
Don’t freak out at the mention of drug interactions. Drugs that utilize CYP450 can interact with a variety of things, even menthol cough drops are suspected of interacting with blood thinners.
(Read More About Cannabis & Medication Interactions)
Because cannabis is an anti-coagulant, and because of the potential for blood thinners and cannabis to interact, patients on blood thinners should use caution when adding medical marijuana to their routine.
Healthcare providers should monitor platelet levels and coagulation factors (PTT, PT/INR, CBC), especially during the first few months of adding medical marijuana.
Patients who mix weed and blood thinners (and/or their caregivers) should also be aware of the signs of “thin blood”.
“Thin blood” means the blood does not clot adequately. In severe cases “thin blood” can be deadly.
Signs or symptoms your blood might be too thin.
There have been case studies attributing excess bleeding to a cannabis and coumadin interaction, however, many patients taking blood thinners use recreational cannabis without issue. Caution should be utilized.
Patients should know that adding an occasional high dose of cannabis can cause blood to thin temporarily.
In some cases, this could be similar to taking a one-time double dose of blood-thinner medication, it could temporarily increases the risks, but is unlikely to cause long-term issues. As the cannabinoids are excreted from the body, the platelets and clotting factors should return to their previous levels.
According to anecdotal evidence, many patients taking blood thinners use medical marijuana effectively without reporting significant interactions, however, all patients with cardiac issues should use cannabis under the guidance of their doctors.
When patients taking blood thinners choose to use marijuana, they should know the signs and symptoms of thin blood, and consume cannabis under the care of a licensed healthcare provider.Trending Now
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