Medical Marijuana
Below you'll find an article from a reporter who posted some old information from WebMD about Medical Marijuana.
The information for the most part holds up even now and it's been a few years sense the original article was written. Although there have been a ton of research done and written about the benefits of medical marijuana the benefits seem to be consistent until now.
As you'll see in this article the benefits they listed are the same benefits they list today. The studies of today are focused on the "HOW" ie.. How does medical marijuana actually do what it does in the body". I think there needs to be more research done on, "what other medical benefits can this plant provide for the human body".
Research done in both directions would benefit everyone greatly. We need to know the WHAT ELSE just as much as we need to know the HOW DOES IT DO THAT if we are to make medical breakthroughs.
Now the article....
By Anne Harding
More states are passing laws that allow people to use medical marijuana. So what does it treat, and who can and should use it?
Pain is the main reason people ask for a prescription, says Barth Wilsey, MD, a pain medicine specialist at the University of California Davis Medical Center. It could be from headaches, a disease like cancer, or a long-term condition, like glaucoma or nerve pain.
If you live in a state where medical marijuana is legal and your doctor thinks it would help, you’ll get a “marijuana card.” You will be put on a list that allows you to buy marijuana from an authorized seller, called a dispensary.
Doctors also may prescribe medical marijuana to treat:
- Muscle spasms caused by multiple sclerosis
- Nausea from cancer chemotherapy
- Poor appetite and weight loss caused by chronic illness, such as HIV, or nerve pain
- Seizure disorders
- Crohn's disease
The FDA has also approved THC, a key ingredient in marijuana, to treat nausea and improve appetite. It's available by prescription Marinol(dronabinol) and Cesamet (nabilone).
Your body already makes marijuana-like chemicals that affect pain, inflammation, and many other processes. Marijuana can sometimes help those natural chemicals work better, says Laura Borgelt, PharmD, of the University of Colorado.
Medical marijuana may be:
- Smoked
- Vaporized (heated until active ingredients are released, but no smoke is formed)
- Eaten (usually in the form of cookies or candy)
- Taken as a liquid extract
Side effects of marijuana that usually don’t last long can include:
- Dizziness
- Drowsiness
- Short-term memory loss
- Euphoria
More serious side effects include severe anxiety and psychosis.
Medical marijuana is not monitored like FDA-approved medicines. When using it, you don’t know its potential to cause cancer, its purity, potency, or side effects.
Only people who have a card from a doctor should use medical marijuana. Doctors will not prescribe medical marijuana to anyone under 18. Others who should not use it:
- People with heart disease
- Pregnant women
- People with a history of psychosis
SOURCES: Orrin Devinsky, M.D., director, Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, NYU Langone Medical Center, New York City; Brandy Fureman, Ph.D., vice president, research and new therapies, Epilepsy Foundation; Samuel Berkovic, M.D., director, University of Melbourne's Epilepsy Research Center, Australia; May 25, 2017, New England Journal of Medicine
Copyright © 2013-2017 HealthDay. All rights reserved.
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