Adrug from a new class of wight-loss treatments disrupted wiring needed for brain development in young mice, American recearchers said, raising concerns about using such medications in childnren. Mark Bear and colleagues at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology studied the effect of a chemical that suppresses appetite by blocking cannabinoid receptors in the brain, the same brain mechanisms that make people hungry when they smoke marijuana. " I think that the cautionary note is that these mechanisms play an important role in…… brain development,"
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