Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Cannabis. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Cannabis. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Tư, 31 tháng 8, 2016

Cannabis: A Cure For Epilepsy?

By: Alexandria Addesso

Although cannabis has been known for its therapeutic and medicinal functions for thousands of years, the United States seems to be slow to the learning curve. In a previous New Mind Journal article, the benefits of marijuana treatment for cancer were discussed, this article will focus on the use of the plant for another devastating disorder. Epilepsy.

Epilepsy is defined as a disorder in which nerve cell activity in the brain is disturbed, thus causing seizures. A person suffering from epilepsy is usually treated with a variety of drugs, but not all forms of epilepsy can be treated with such pharmaceutical drugs thus leaving their seizures uncontrollable.

Individuals that endure such untreatable seizures are often children suffering from pediatric epilepsy disorders, such as Doose, Lennox-Gastaut, and Dravet syndromes. Since marijuana began being legalized for medicinal use, floods of stories have been told of parents who have risked it all and even relocated so that their children can legally use cannabis oil to treat their epilepsy and have a normal life.



What is most commonly prescribed is a treatment called Charlotte’s Web, named after a young girl suffering from Dravet syndrome to the point that her multiple seizures that lasted for hours at a time were causing serious cognitive problems as well as delaying her developmental growth. Her name was Charlotte Figi.

Charlotte’s Web is cannabis oil extracted from a strain that is high in Cannabidiol (CBD) and low in Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) which is the chemical that gets people “high”.

“The biggest misconception about treating a child-like little Charlotte is most people think that we're getting her high, most people think she's getting stoned," Josh Stanley, one of the owners of the dispensary that originally grew this strain.



Yet this treatment is still considered controversial. The Epilepsy Foundation does not endorse nor discourage this treatment, but instead states that each individual should follow their physician's recommendations in congruence with the law.

The University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus is currently engaging in a study on Dravet with epilepsy patients who have tried Charlotte's Web. The genetics of the subjects who have seen a drastic change after using Charlotte’s Web will be compared with those who have not. The findings could be highly significant for the use of the treatment. Only time will tell.

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Thứ Tư, 24 tháng 8, 2016

Cannabis: A Cure For Cancer?

By: Alexandria Addesso

Cannabis has been utilized for medical purposes for thousands of years. Yet in many counties throughout the world it is still viewed as an illegal drug. In the United States cannabis on the federal level is listed as a Schedule 1 drug, classifying it as having “high potential for abuse and no known medical use,” even though it is legal for medicinal use in 25 states and recreational use in four states plus Washington DC.

While marijuana has been known to cure many illnesses from insomnia to depression to pms, one of its most significant uses in a treatment being studied for quite some time is with cancer. According to cancer.gov, tests have shown that the use of cannabinoid oils helped lessen or eliminate nausea, loss of appetite, and pain management better than more conventional pharmaceutical drugs. Oncologists are more likely to recommend or prescribe cannabis to their patients than any other types of physicians, but usually always in conjunction with more “conventional” treatments.



But the real question that needs to be answered is whether or not cannabis can be used to treat and cure cancer itself and not just it’s side effects? Cannabinoids are known to possess antitumor properties and be successful in limiting inflammation, cell proliferation, and cell survival. Yet not all cannabinoids come from the marijuana plant, there are also types that come from the human endorphin system as well synthetically made cannabinoids. Cannabidiol (CBD) makes up 40 percent of the cannabinoids extracted from the cannabis plant and is known for its anti-inflammatory and anti-anxiety properties. Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) is the chemical in cannabis that, according to cancer.gov, is effective in shrinking tumors. Yet most if not all studies suggest that treatment for cancer using marijuana should be paired with other treatments such as chemotherapy to be most effective.



Even though studies have yet to deem cannabis as the cure-all for cancer, it has definitely been shown to be very effective. So why isn’t it legal for cancer treatment across the board? Pharmaceutical companies have too much to lose on patents on cancer drugs that have long been on the market. Being that there is still such a surging black market for cannabis, even in the extremely pure and medically useful distilled oil form, capitalism has too much to lose. Even those vendors in the cannabis industry legally pose a threat to big pharm being that most are locally owned business.

The bottom-line is, greed kills.

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