Poster Session II A337 GASTROINTESTINAL MOTILITY IN CANNABIS USERS: A WIRELESS MOTILITY CAPSULE INVESTIGATION
D Javidi, S Xue, E Tonzi, E Shah, M Curley

TL;DR
This study found that cannabis users have delayed gastric emptying, suggesting that cannabinoids may affect gastrointestinal motility in humans.
Contribution
The study provides new human evidence that cannabis use is associated with delayed gastric emptying using wireless motility capsule data.
Findings
Cannabis users had significantly longer gastric emptying times compared to non-users.
Cannabis users were more likely to report nausea and vomiting but less likely to report bloating.
No significant differences were found in small bowel or colon transit times between the groups.
Abstract
The cannabinoid receptors CB1 and CB2 are thought to play a role in gastrointestinal motility. Dronabinol, a non-selective cannabinoid agonist, has been shown to delay gastric emptying in humans(1). In mice, administration of a selective CB1 receptor agonist, was shown to delay gastric emptying and subsequent administration of a CB1 receptor antagonist reversed the effect(2). The goal of our study was to further explore the effects of cannabinoids on gastrointestinal motility in humans by conducting a retrospective analysis of a large cohort of patients who had undergone wireless motility capsule studies at our academic medical center. A retrospective analysis was conducted using data collected from the electronic medical record of patients who had undergone wireless motility capsule studies at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center from 2018-2022. Patients were divided into two cohorts…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGastrointestinal motility and disorders · Cannabis and Cannabinoid Research · Intestinal and Peritoneal Adhesions
