Active marijuana use may double the risk of stress cardiomyopathy, an uncommon heart muscle malfunction that can mimic heart attack symptoms, researchers said.
Stress cardiomyopathy is a sudden, usually temporary, weakening of the heart muscle that reduces the heart's ability to pump, leading to chest pain, shortness of breath, dizziness and sometimes fainting, they said.
Active marijuana use was identified either by information provided by the patient in their medical history, or by a marker in the patient's urine.
Data from the US Nationwide Inpatient Sample identified 33,343 people who were hospitalised with stress cardiomyopathy between 2003-2011 in the US.
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Of those, 210 (less than one per cent) were also identified as marijuana users.
Compared with non-users, researchers found that marijuana users were more likely to be younger, male with fewer cardiovascular risk factors, including less high blood pressure, diabetes and high cholesterol.
"This development of stress cardiomyopathy in younger patients who used marijuana suggests a possible link that needs to be further investigated," said Sahil Agrawal from St Luke's.
Marijuana users were more likely than non-users to have a history of depression - 32.9 per cent vs 14.5 per cent, psychosis (11.9 per cent vs 3.8 per cent), anxiety disorder (28.4 per cent vs 16.2 per cent), alcoholism (13.3 per cent vs 2.8 per cent), tobacco use (73.3 per cent vs 28.6 per cent) and multiple substance abuse (11.4 per cent vs 0.3 per cent).
"If you are using marijuana and develop symptoms such as chest pain and shortness of breath, you should be evaluated by a healthcare provider to make sure you aren't having stress cardiomyopathy or another heart problem," Singh said.