The effects were seen in both men and women, and irrespective of other potential risk factors for heart disease and stroke, said researchers from University of Western Australia.
Amphetamine is a stimulant, which sends the sympathetic nervous system and production of the 'fight or flight' hormone adrenaline into overdrive.
It is associated with cardiovascular system effects, including speeding up the heart rate, sharply increasing blood pressure, and boosting the risk of stroke, heart attack and aneurysm rupture.
They therefore measured the flow of blood through the brachial artery in the upper arm and the radial artery in the forearm of 713 people in their 30s and 40s, attending a clinic for substance misuse between 2006 and 2011.
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They did this to assess the degree of arterial stiffening; arteries harden as the body ages.
They used a normal blood pressure cuff for the upper arm and a non-invasive monitoring system, called the SphygmoCor, for the forearm.
Each patient was asked about their drug use and placed into one of four groups: non-smokers (483); smokers (107); amphetamine users (55); and methadone (heroin substitute) users (68).
Most (94 per cent) of those in the amphetamine group had used within the previous week and nearly half had used just the day before, on the 66 occasions they were monitored with the SphygmoCor.
The results showed that of all four groups, the cardiovascular system of amphetamine users seemed to be ageing much faster than that of smokers and methadone users, both in terms of pure chronological age, and over time.
This suggests that the heart itself is ageing faster than expected, said researchers, who point out that amphetamine use is often protracted, repeated, and long term.
Many physiological processes in the body start to fail over the course of the lifespan as part of the normal ageing process, they said.
However, on the basis of their findings, stimulant abuse seems to compound and accelerate this process, they suggest.
The study was published in the journal Heart Asia.