Using cannabis can directly and indirectly increase blood pressure in the first 30 minutes, but after can decrease blood pressure due to its relaxing, sedative and anti-anxiety effects. There is no definitive evidence that cannabis use can increase the risk of cardiovascular diseases (CVDs). The evidence is generally positive, and some of the negatives can be mitigated by refraining from smoking herbal cannabis.
Explore A-Z conditions
Cannabis for Hypertension and Hypertensive Diseases
Research Overview
Animal Study
31
Clinical Meta-analysis
1
Clinical Trial
23
Double Blind Clinical Trial
16
Laboratory Study
5
Meta-analysis
48
Meta-analysis -
1
Total studies
Hypertension and Hypertensive Diseases
125
Positive
86 studies
69%
Negative
25 studies
20%
Inconclusive
14 studies
11%
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Relevant studies
The information in our comprehensive A to Z encyclopedia comes from real scientific studies.
Uncover the detailed results of these studies and find out how effective medical marijuana is for dozens of conditions.
- A cannabinoid with cardiovascular activity but no overt behavioral effects
- A Case of a Patient With Cannabis Hyperemesis Syndrome Along With Recurrent Nephrolithiasis
- A Case of Synthetic Cannabinoid (K2)-Induced Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy Syndrome (PRES)
- A cross-sectional analysis of the association between marijuana and cigarette smoking with metabolic syndrome among adults in the United States
- Acute and long-term effects of cannabinoids on hypertension and kidney injury