Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - How Marijuana Affects Muscle Growth and Performance
Episode Date: June 19, 2023Many gym-goers want to know if using marijuana can interfere with their gains or negatively impact their progress. However, the controversial ban of American sprinter, Sha’Carri Richardson, from the... 2021 Tokyo Olympics due to a positive marijuana test also ignited a global debate about whether weed can be performance-enhancing. In this episode, we take a deep dive into the scientific research surrounding marijuana and its potential impacts on athletic performance, muscle growth, strength, and endurance. We'll discuss what marijuana is and evaluate its potential benefits and drawbacks in the context of athletic performance and bodybuilding. Whether you're an athlete, fitness enthusiast, or someone interested in the science of fitness, this episode will provide you with evidence-based insights into the complex relationship between marijuana and fitness. Timestamps: (0:00) - Please leave a review of the show wherever you listen to podcasts and make sure to subscribe! (1:27) - What type of performance effects does marijuana cause? (3:59) - How does marijuana affect strength? (6:58) - Can marijuana help improve muscle growth? (9:20) - Try Whey+ risk-free today! Go to buylegion.com/whey and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points! (11:50) - Can marijuana reduce pain? (15:38) - How does marijuana help anxiety? Mentioned on the Show: Try Whey+ risk-free today! Go to buylegion.com/whey and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello there and welcome to yet another episode of Muscle for Life. I am Mike Matthews.
Thank you for joining me today to learn about marijuana. And I wanted to record this episode
to answer some questions that I often get like, is marijuana performance enhancing?
Some people ask that because in 2021, there was an American sprinter named Sha'Carri Richardson.
I believe I'm pronouncing her name correctly.
And she was banned from the Tokyo Olympics after she tested positive for marijuana.
And that then raised the question of why exactly is it a performance enhancing drug?
Many other people have asked me about marijuana and games.
Does it interfere with strength? Does it
interfere with muscle growth? And then there are questions around health, particularly anxiety,
recovery, pain. And so those are some of the things that I'm going to be addressing in today's
episode. All right. Normally I would start a discussion like this with a definition
of terms, but I think you know what marijuana is. Dried leaves, flowers, stems, seeds of the
cannabis plant, and it is the most widely used illicit drug on the planet. It's estimated that
188 million adults worldwide used marijuana in 2017, and that's just under 4% of the global adult
population. So let's move on from that to the meat of today's episode. Let's start with performance
effects. How does marijuana affect aerobic performance or endurance performance, cardiovascular
performance? Let's start there. In a review that was conducted by scientists at St. Vincent's
Hospital Medical School, researchers analyzed the results of 15 studies, and what they found So let's start there. In a review that was conducted by scientists at St. Vincent's Hospital
Medical School, researchers analyzed the results of 15 studies. And what they found is that marijuana
had no positive effects on aerobic performance. Specifically, the researchers found that smoking
marijuana hastens fatigue, it increases perceived exertion, and it decreases work capacity, which is
the amount of exercise that you're able to
complete in one session. It also can make you feel dizzy, which of course can make it harder
to complete a workout. There was another review conducted by scientists at the University of
Toronto that looked at four studies on marijuana's effects on aerobic performance and found that two
of the studies showed that marijuana had no effect and then two of the studies showed that marijuana had no effect. And then two of the studies showed that it negatively impacted aerobic performance. And then to quote
one final umbrella review, it's called, which is a review of reviews, quote, cannabis consumption
has an ergolytic effect on exercise performance and therefore does not act as a sport performance
enhancing agent as raised by popular beliefs.
And ergolytic, by the way, means impairing exercise capacity or athletic performance.
So drugs that enhance those things are ergo-genic.
Drugs that impair them are ergo-lytic.
And so continuing the quote,
Thus, cannabis consumption prior to exercise should be avoided in order to maximize performance in sports. for example. There's also research that shows that long-term marijuana use can severely, well,
I should say marijuana smoking in particular, can severely impair respiratory health. And that
doesn't mean that it will stymie your aerobic performance, but it is probably not going to help
if your lungs are not working as well as they could. So if you play sports or do any sort of
endurance exercise in any quote-unquote serious capacity or competitive capacity, marijuana is
almost certainly not going to help you. You will almost certainly perform better without it. Now,
what about strength though? How does marijuana affect strength? Well, only two studies have
investigated the effect of marijuana use on strength, and one found that it was unaffected
by marijuana use, while the other reported that weakness was clearly demonstrated after using
marijuana, although there aren't many more details that were shared. And both studies only measured grip strength and neither used athletes
as participants. So it's not clear if those results would apply to weightlifters or bodybuilders,
more serious weightlifters. Right. And while it's purely speculative, some researchers believe that
marijuana may increase strength through something called bronchodilation, which is relaxing the muscles
in the lungs and opening up the airways. And the reason why some researchers are speculating this
is studies show that beta-2 agonist drugs, which cause bronchodilation, can improve strength and
sprint performance and power in non-asthmatic people. And since short-term marijuana use is
associated with bronchodilation,
theoretically, it could have a similar effect to other beta-2 agonists. But I will say that has not been proven in research. Currently, it is just a hypothesis. And I should also mention
that there is a credible counter-argument to that, which is for strength to be effectively employed in any sort of sporting
context, even in weightlifting. In the case of more technically demanding compound exercises,
like even a back squat or a deadlift or an overhead press, that strength needs to be focused
and it needs to be precise. You can be very strong. You can have a lot of raw strength,
potential strength, but you can fail to express that strength effectively if you have trouble
concentrating, if you can't coordinate your body properly to use good technique. And I mentioned
that because research shows that using marijuana can hinder hand-eye coordination, it can hinder focus,
it can hinder decision-making, and those things are going to make it harder to effectively express strength in the gym and certainly in more complex activities like strength-dominant
sports.
So the weight of the evidence here isn't as clear as in the case of aerobic performance,
mostly because we don't have much research on marijuana and strength.
But if I had to bet some money and then look into the crystal ball to see what the determination
will be at some point in the future when there is more research, I'm going to guess that
marijuana does not have any consistent, reliable strength enhancing effects, and it's probably more likely to decrease strength or at least the ability to apply that strength effectively.
A best case scenario is maybe a neutral effect, neither enhancing nor impairing.
Okay, let's move on now to marijuana and muscle growth, a hot topic, perennially hot topic.
Unfortunately, there are no studies that I know of that have looked at the effects of marijuana on muscle growth, a hot topic, perennially hot topic. Unfortunately, there are no studies that
I know of that have looked at the effects of marijuana on muscle growth. So it's not possible
to draw any firm evidence-based conclusions about how it can affect your gains. And even
speculating is difficult because if we look at relevant research, there are a lot of conflicting
findings. So for example, on one hand, you have studies that show how marijuana can affect
anabolic hormones, particularly how THC can lower testosterone in rats and monkeys. But then on the
other hand, human trials are more of a mixed bag. You have some studies that have shown that THC can lower testosterone and growth hormone
levels in humans.
And then you have other studies finding that it has no effect on these hormones.
And there are various reasons why that could be why some studies are showing that it impairs
these hormones and other studies are showing that it doesn't impair these hormones, individual
factors, lifestyle, diet, genetics. So it's basically impossible at this point to
predict how marijuana can affect your hormones. You would have to conduct an N1 experiment and
just see what happens. And then in addition to the hormonal component of muscle building,
you'd have to consider what we talked about regarding strength and how marijuana
might impact, negatively impact your strength or your ability to use that strength effectively and
thereby negatively impact your workout performance. And of course, if marijuana impairs your ability
to train effectively, then it almost certainly is going to impair your ability to build muscle
effectively, even if it's indirectly. But if your workout performance is impaired by, let's just
assign an arbitrary number, by 20% on average. An average workout, because of your marijuana use,
is 20% less effective than it could be or than it would be if you were not using marijuana.
than it could be or than it would be if you were not using marijuana. Well, if you play that out over time, that is going to mean gaining less muscle and strength. And so then if you want to
maximize muscle and strength gain, if you want to maximize workout performance, I think it is
best to steer clear of marijuana. One of the easiest ways to increase muscle and strength
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Okay, now let's talk about marijuana and pain.
Let's start with what I think is a little interesting aside, and that is that athletes
have been using cannabis to relieve pain for a very long time, for thousands of years,
actually.
It was one of the ingredients in the
Fuscom Olympionico in scriptum or the Olympic victors dark ointment that was used at the
classic Olympics. And more recently, Western researchers conducted a large meta-analysis.
This was done by scientists at the University of Bristol, And they looked at 79 studies that encompassed 6,462 participants,
and they found evidence that marijuana can indeed treat pain and spasticity, muscle spasms. And
therefore, marijuana can indirectly boost athletic performance by helping athletes deal with aches
and pains that accompany their usually rather rigorous training
routines. And so again, if pain is impairing performance and if marijuana can help reduce
pain, that of course then allows for better performance. Research also shows that smoking
marijuana can increase pain tolerance, which of course then can give athletes a competitive edge
by allowing them to train and compete through pain that might otherwise reduce their performance or even sideline them.
Now, that does not necessarily mean that I generally recommend people use marijuana to deal with pain.
There are many other things that you can do and I would say you should do to try to get at the root of the pain rather than just
treat it as a symptom. And that is especially true for everyday gym goers who are dealing with
everyday gym goer pains, which often are the result of either improper training or I guess
you could just say bad luck. So in the case of improper training, of course, doing many different exercises, not just heavy
compound exercises, but many different exercises with improper form, with bad technique.
And then if you add heavy weights on top of that, that is an easy way to get hurt.
And before you get hurt, before you sustain an acute injury, often there are some pains
that you start to notice.
sustain an acute injury, often there are some pains that you start to notice. And then what some people do is train through the pain and then the pain gets worse. And then they start using
drugs to dull the pain, painkillers, marijuana, whatever. And they continue to make the same
training mistakes, continue to aggravate what is now turning into an acute injury until it is a very painful acute injury that forces
them to stop continually aggravating it. And so then in that case, which is very common,
I've made that mistake myself over the years, just being stubborn and not wanting to change
my programming to work around what is maybe just a repetitive stress injury, which you can do things to avoid,
use proper technique, for example, follow a well-programmed workout routine, get enough sleep,
eat well, blah, blah, blah. But if you train rather intensely for long enough, you are going
to run into some repetitive stress injuries, which are those nagging aches and pains that you can
push through but don't quite feel right. And if you do keep training through them, they get
progressively worse over time. And so that is inevitably going to happen to you. It happens
to me probably once every six months. There's something that just gets a little bit aggravated
and I have to change something in
my training to let it recover. And that is what you have to do. Do not train through pain. Now,
I'm not talking about muscle soreness. You can train through muscle soreness. I'm talking about
pain. Ouch. Especially pain in your joints. All right, let's move on to marijuana and anxiety.
Studies show that it can indeed lower anxiety, and it also appears to be
able to help some athletes reach a flow state and be more creative in their expression of their
athletic abilities. There's also research that it can suppress or I guess you could say scrub
fear memories. So athletes are less afraid of what might go wrong and are more likely to perform without fear of failure. And because of those effects, it's very possible that marijuana can improve sleep quality, which then would further improve recovery and improve feelings of the potential benefits that I've mentioned in today's episode have to be weighed against the potential downsides as well.
People who are enthusiastic about marijuana will often point to research showing that marijuana is safer than alcohol for treating pain or anxiety or depression or achieving other benefits. And I would agree with that. I think
that is a fair interpretation of the weight of the evidence. But I think it's also a stretch
to refer to marijuana as safe. For example, studies show that regular long term use of
marijuana is associated with a number of non-optimum conditions, like a
number of negative changes in the brain, including white and gray matter volume, blood flow in
the brain.
Marijuana also appears to disrupt important brain chemicals like glutamate, dopamine,
and others.
And those things taken collectively are associated with negative changes in learning, attention, memory, overall brain activity.
That is also then associated with mental health related issues like earlier onset of psychosis, depression, anxiety.
And if all that is not enough to discourage you from using marijuana regularly, studies also show that regular long term marijuana use is associated with an increased risk of stroke,
of atrial fibrillation, which is irregular heartbeat, respiratory complications,
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, testicular cancer. And research shows that people who use
marijuana regularly are also at an increased risk of tobacco and nicotine dependence.
And smoking cigarettes is one of the worst things
that you can do for your health. Drinking too much alcohol, smoking cigarettes, two of the
absolute worst things that you can do if you want to live a long, healthy life.
So to summarize, weed is not going to kill your gains. It is not going to cause you to lose
muscle. It is not going to give you the testosterone levels of a prepubescent
girl, although it may reduce your testosterone levels significantly. However, it almost certainly
will impair your aerobic performance. So that would be basically any and all sports. It very
likely will impair your strength training to some degree, and thereby it can reduce the effectiveness of that strength training over time. And it comes with considerable health risks if you use it regularly and if you
use it over the long term. And so my position on marijuana in general is more or less in line with
my position on many drugs. Stay away from it if you can. If you are dealing with pain or anxiety or other issues that
we can help with, try other options. Try lifestyle interventions, diet interventions, exercise
interventions, supplement interventions, interpersonal interventions, psychological
interventions. I could go on and on, but I think you get the point. And finally, if you are resolved
to continue using marijuana for whatever reason, at least get the point. And finally, if you are resolved to continue using marijuana
for whatever reason, at least understand the risks, maybe look into ways to mitigate those
risks and understand that people who claim that there are no serious risks or that marijuana is
safe or entirely safe, those people are either ignorant or lying. Well, I hope you liked this episode. I hope you found it helpful. And if you did,
subscribe to the show because it makes sure that you don't miss new episodes. And it also helps me because it increases the rankings of the show a little bit, which of course then makes it
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looking for new ideas and constructive feedback. So thanks again for listening to this episode,
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