Can you use marijuana before or after surgery?

Posted on April 4, 2019

I live in California.  Marijuana is now legal here.  I have patients who ask me frequently if they can use it as part of their recovery.

I focus on your habits only as they relate to my surgery with you. Does it affect healing? Does it affect blood supply? Scarring? Infection rates? Lung function? Does it increase your risk for any complications? Does it interact with anesthesia given during the surgical procedure or the medicines used after?  Does it increase or decrease the effects of other medications? How long does it stay in your system? Can you reverse it? Does it matter how you take it? THC vs CBD?

My short answer is I do not know its effects.  It has not been well studied.

There is such a litany of different combinations and products. There are creams, oils, vaping, gummies.  There are varying degrees of THC and CBD.  There are varying concentrations. When I do literature searches in PubMed, which shows published papers across the specialties, I see varying reports.  Most are from 2018.  That is because this is an evolving field.  There are benefits touted with respect to inflammation, anxiety, and pain.  But I care about its effect for my surgical patients. The fact it may be good for arthritis does not mean it is okay for surgery.  Look at the commonly used, over the counter medication Advil.  I cannot have my plastic surgery patients use Advil around the time of surgery, because it increases the risk for bleeds.  Advil is commonly used for other surgeries like hysterectomies and knee scopes- but it is not okay for tummy tucks.

Looking at surgical papers I found ones like these:

The lists go on and on.

Again, this is a complex issue.  We will figure this out.  Scientific studies can help us understand its effects and where it ideally should be used.  THC vs CBD, concentrations, and route of administration likely need to be looked at separately.

Do not forget cannabis is a drug.  Until it is better understood, studies like those above indicate there are issues with cannabis in surgical patients –higher infection rates, revision rates, vasoconstriction (which reduces blood supply), increased need for anesthesia and postoperative dosages, and cardiac effects.