Marijuana Gains Wonder Drug Status

Wavels

Well-Known Member
Marijuana Gains Wonder Drug StatusBy Lester Grinspoon, Boston Globe. Posted March 3, 2007.



A new study reveals that pot relieves pain that narcotics like morphine and OxyContin have hardly any effect on, and could help ease suffering from illnesses such as multiple sclerosis and diabetes.
A new study in the journal Neurology is being hailed as unassailable proof that marijuana is a valuable medicine. It is a sad commentary on the state of modern medicine -- and US drug policy -- that we still need "proof" of something that medicine has known for 5,000 years.
The study, from the University of California at San Francisco, found smoked marijuana to be effective at relieving the extreme pain of a debilitating condition known as peripheral neuropathy. It was a study of HIV patients, but a similar type of pain caused by damage to nerves afflicts people with many other illnesses including diabetes and multiple sclerosis. Neuropathic pain is notoriously resistant to treatment with conventional pain drugs. Even powerful and addictive narcotics like morphine and OxyContin often provide little relief. This study leaves no doubt that marijuana can safely ease this type of pain.
As all marijuana research in the United States must be, the new study was conducted with government-supplied marijuana of notoriously poor quality. So it probably underestimated the potential benefit.
This is all good news, but it should not be news at all. In the 40-odd years I have been studying the medicinal uses of marijuana, I have learned that the recorded history of this medicine goes back to ancient times and that in the 19th century it became a well-established Western medicine whose versatility and safety were unquestioned. From 1840 to 1900, American and European medical journals published over 100 papers on the therapeutic uses of marijuana, also known as cannabis.
Of course, our knowledge has advanced greatly over the years. Scientists have identified over 60 unique constituents in marijuana, called cannabinoids, and we have learned much about how they work. We have also learned that our own bodies produce similar chemicals, called endocannabinoids.
The mountain of accumulated anecdotal evidence that pointed the way to the present and other clinical studies also strongly suggests there are a number of other devastating disorders and symptoms for which marijuana has been used for centuries; they deserve the same kind of careful, methodologically sound research. While few such studies have so far been completed, all have lent weight to what medicine already knew but had largely forgotten or ignored: Marijuana is effective at relieving nausea and vomiting, spasticity, appetite loss, certain types of pain, and other debilitating symptoms. And it is extraordinarily safe -- safer than most medicines prescribed every day. If marijuana were a new discovery rather than a well-known substance carrying cultural and political baggage, it would be hailed as a wonder drug.
The pharmaceutical industry is scrambling to isolate cannabinoids and synthesize analogs, and to package them in non-smokable forms. In time, companies will almost certainly come up with products and delivery systems that are more useful and less expensive than herbal marijuana. However, the analogs they have produced so far are more expensive than herbal marijuana, and none has shown any improvement over the plant nature gave us to take orally or to smoke.
We live in an antismoking environment. But as a method of delivering certain medicinal compounds, smoking marijuana has some real advantages: The effect is almost instantaneous, allowing the patient, who after all is the best judge, to fine-tune his or her dose to get the needed relief without intoxication. Smoked marijuana has never been demonstrated to have serious pulmonary consequences, but in any case the technology to inhale these cannabinoids without smoking marijuana already exists as vaporizers that allow for smoke-free inhalation.
Hopefully the UCSF study will add to the pressure on the US government to rethink its irrational ban on the medicinal use of marijuana -- and its destructive attacks on patients and caregivers in states that have chosen to allow such use. Rather than admit they have been mistaken all these years, federal officials can cite "important new data" and start revamping outdated and destructive policies. The new Congress could go far in establishing its bona fides as both reasonable and compassionate by immediately moving on this issue.
Such legislation would bring much-needed relief to millions of Americans suffering from cancer, AIDS, multiple sclerosis, arthritis, and other debilitating illnesses.
AlterNet: DrugReporter: Marijuana Gains Wonder Drug Status
 

Godkas

Well-Known Member
The use of marijuana has carried a social stigma for so long its about time more people started standing out against the atrocity of banning a native plant.

(yes marijuana was here before we were and is found all over the globe.)

The United States government could avert two current disasters with the legalization of marijuana.

1st and foremost. The legalization of marijuana would release the grip the pharmacudical companies have on the prices of medication. NOBODY is going to buy super ass expensive pain pills when you can grow pot in your own home for pennies on the dollar.

2nd The local state and federal governments would be able to place tax on the purchase of marijuana and use this money for much needed local reform and to pay off the national debt as well.

The positive aspects greatly outweigh the accepted social standpoint and fears about marijuana.
 

ViRedd

New Member
"The study, from the University of California at San Francisco, found smoked marijuana to be effective at relieving the extreme pain of a debilitating condition known as peripheral neuropathy."

Yeppers, that what I suffer from in my feet and toes. A couple of hits off the bong, or a quarter of one of my canna cookies and the pain just disappears like magic.

Vi
 

cali-high

Well-Known Member
awsome are you in a great deal of pain vi?


i get alot of migranes and bad headaches that hurt for up to a week and when i smoke it releases preesure.

also it helps with my stomach i have an uneasy stomach and it when i smoke it makes it easy for me to eat without a care in the world.



peace
cali-high
 

TillthedayiDIE420

Well-Known Member
"The study, from the University of California at San Francisco, found smoked marijuana to be effective at relieving the extreme pain of a debilitating condition known as peripheral neuropathy."

Yeppers, that what I suffer from in my feet and toes. A couple of hits off the bong, or a quarter of one of my canna cookies and the pain just disappears like magic.

Vi
its the same for me, i have diabete's and just like you said it disappears like magic. :)

Vonda drug!
 

VictorVIcious

Well-Known Member
Thanks Wavels I tried to post the address of that article and couldn't get it done. Could you post the article from the Wisconsin Madison that was in thier paper yesterday. If you can would you post it in the We need to stand up and fight thread. I'd appreciate it. I think its right on point for my rambling posts.
 

Vote 2 Legalize Marijuana

Well-Known Member
Excellent article!

I broke my neck and in the process my spinal cord was damaged really bad. In other words I was like Christopher Reeves. After going through extensive surgeries and tons of physical therapy my condition got much better. Although I can walk now, I have many problems such as spasms, legs feeling like they are on fire, massive headaches that last days, and not to mention all the pain I am in on a daily basis. Doctors have given me many different types of pain blockers over the years, and to which none of them ever worked for the pain. So much for pain blockers such as "Lyrica". The only way I can cope with all of this is by smoking cannabis. Thus the reason for my crossbreeding experiments to create a new and very powerful strain.

It is my hope that one day cannabis will be made available to all those that really need it. Here in my state I had to hire a lawyer and had to fight to get on medical marijuana. It was the only way to get my type of conditions included in the Colorado Medical Marijuana program. With out the help of my lawyer I would have been screwed. I would be like most of you --> growing without a medical marijuana card. We all need to fight to get this passed in all states, and then we can start to get the DEA to change their views on cannabis in general.
 

dbsons66

Active Member
I have a really bad back injury,And yes bud seem to help with the server pain better then the oxycotin i take ,But the state i live in ,PA does not have MM LIKE THE WESTREN STATES DO.I wish they did then maybe my life would be worth living at times,SERVER PAIN REALLY SUCkS,I GIVE ALL MY PAIN PILL FOR SOME GOOD RELIFE
 
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