Clinical Endocannabinoid Deficiency and Cognitive Continuity: A Longitudinal Case Study Challenging the Neurodegeneration Paradigm

“Despite expanding acceptance of cannabis for medicinal use, empirical literature remains sparse regarding the long-term mental and neurobiological outcomes of continuous cannabis exposure over several decades. This self-case study examines the psychobiological trajectory of a biomolecular psychologist who has used cannabis intermittently since the 1970s and therapeutically since 2010 to manage polypharmacy withdrawal, opioid dependence, and psychiatric symptoms. The analysis integrates self-observational data, neurocognitive assessments, pharmacological history, and psychosocial context to evaluate outcomes on affect regulation, cognitive performance, neuroplasticity, and motivation. The case challenges persistent assumptions of irreversible cannabis-induced cognitive decline and supports the hypothesis that sustained cannabinoid modulation may promote neural resilience when employed within a biomolecularly informed framework. Findings are illustrative and intended to generate testable hypotheses rather than establish causality.”

“For more than half a century, the United States has maintained one of the most comprehensive prohibitions on biological cannabinoid research in modern science. The enactment of the Controlled Substances Act in 1970 effectively silenced
the empirical study of the plant Cannabis sativa and its naturally occurring cannabinoids, leaving a void in scientific understanding that has persisted for decades. The policy was founded less on biomedical evidence than on sociopolitical ideology—a moral model of addiction that conflated psychoactivity with deviance. By classifying naturally occurring
cannabinoids as Schedule I substances, federal policy positioned them alongside heroin and LSD, asserting “no accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse”. Consequently, generations of scientists were restricted from exploring naturally occurring cannabinoids’ molecular, neurobiological, and psychopharmacological functions.”

“While modern prohibition sought to erase the plant’s legitimacy, cannabis itself represents a biological constant—molecules with 12,500 years of medicinal use, abruptly vilified in the modern era. Archaeological and historical records confirm its continuous application in treating pain, inflammation, convulsions, and psychological distress throughout diverse civilizations. Across that immense timeline, humans relied on the plant’s phytochemical complexity—its cannabinoids, terpenes, and flavonoids—to modulate physiological systems long before those systems were scientifically named.”

“The endocannabinoid system (ECS), now recognized as one of the body’s principal homeostatic regulators, mediates neural, immune, and endocrine balance. Yet its formal discovery in the 1990s came paradoxically after half a century of federally enforced ignorance.”


“From a biomolecular perspective, cannabinoids act not as foreign intruders but as complementary ligands within a preexisting molecular conversation between the human body and its endogenous signaling systems. Their therapeutic potential lies not in chemical novelty but in biological familiarity—a fact consistently reaffirmed by modern neurobiological research despite legal obstruction.”

“This five-decade longitudinal case study provides a rare and informative window into the long-term psychobiological effects of sustained botanic cannabinoid use within a cognitively demanding professional context. Contrary to prohibition-era narratives that associate chronic cannabis exposure with cognitive decline, emotional dysregulation and motivational impairment, the findings of this investigation demonstrate a trajectory of preserved neurocognitive integrity, stabilized affective functioning, and enhanced adaptive resilience. These outcomes are consistent with contemporary psychoneuroimmunological models in which the endocannabinoid system operates as a central regulator of homeostatic equilibrium across neural, immune, and endocrine domains.”

https://zealjournals.com/wjbpr/content/clinical-endocannabinoid-deficiency-and-cognitive-continuity-longitudinal-case-study