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CB2 receptor

G

guest

I've been working with a CB2 receptor cannabinoid bearing oil lately.

It's just recently been discovered that a cannabinoid exists outside marijuana. It is a CB2 receptor kind of cannabinoid.

Oil of oregano. Applied externally like a suntan lotion directly over the area of pain.

Kills pain in seconds and is effective for days. Knocks out carpal tunnel in seconds.

If the oil you get is 10% cannabinoid, and you apply one gram of oil, then you have administered 100mg of CB2 cannabinoid directly into the system.

A common joint of good marijuana may have 10mg of THC, a CB1 receptor kind of cannabinoid.

It soaks in quickly and saturates through bone.

This is for external application only! I wouldn't try to smoke any!

Some people are a little sensitive to the oil. If your skin starts to itch, then just wipe off the excess that hasn't soaked in yet.
 
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zingablack

livin my way the high way
Veteran
You found yet another type of healing oil. Thats great, you are def. a trooper for the cause man. PEACE ZB
 

happyherb

no wuckin furries!
Veteran
interesting subject....i was just doing a bit of research the other day about cb1 and cb2...looks like i have more areas to look at too - bookmarked- .HH. =]-~
 
S

Scoobs

So you are saying there are cannabinoids in oregano? Specifically CB2 receptor type cannabinoids.

Interesting find, do you have any links to news articles or scientific journals?
 
G

guest

zingablack said:
You found yet another type of healing oil. Thats great, you are def. a trooper for the cause man. PEACE ZB
We just have to keep it quiet .. otherwise they'll make pizza illegal :muahaha:
 
T

Truthman

Thanks for this info I really appreciate it.

This cb2 agonist is beta-caryphyllene and is in a lot of herbs, spices.


This is a link from that page that showed the herbs and spices that have this cb2 agonist:

http://www.thegoodscentscompany.com/data/rw1011551.html

Also wikipedia:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caryophyllene

* Cannabis, hemp, marijuana (Cannabis sativa)
* Caraway (Carum carvi)
* Cloves (Syzygium aromaticum)
* Many Ocimum (Basil) species
* Oregano (Origanum vulgare)
* Pepper (Piper nigrum)
* Rosemary (Rosmarinus oficinalis)
* True cinnamon (Cinnamomum zeylanicum)

trans-Caryophyllene constitutes about 3.8–37.5% of cannabis flower essential oil.[3]

Essential oil of cinnamon (Cinnamomum zeylanicum) contains about 6.9–11.1% beta-caryophyllene.[4]
 
G

guest

The Holy Oil of Anointing is made up of
Cannabis
Murr
Cinnamon (the true one)
Cinnamon leaf (the not true one that we commonly see in the stores)
Olive oil

CB1 + CB2 Just might explain why it does what it does.
 

StayHigh149

Member
What would be the name of the ingredient to look for. This is what I founfd to be in all that I looked at online:


Oregano essential oil contains the following components:

carvacrol (share 40–70%)
gamma-terpinene (8–10%)
p-cymene (5–10%)
alpha-pinene
myrcene
thymol
flavonoids
caffeic acid derivatives

It should be noted that the Physicians' Desk Reference for Herbal Medicines, Second Edition also points out that there are various chemotypes with differing essential oil composition of thymol, linalool + terpinene-4-ol, linalool, caryophyllene + germacren D, or germacren D as chief components. However, those strains, especially ones high in thymol, are not suitable for preparing oregano essential oil intended for internal consumption.
 
G

guest

Interesting. caryophyllene is the one that has recently been found to be a cannabinoid.

The oils I've been working with are not intended for internal consumption.
 
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StayHigh149

Member
So Peanutbutter,

I'm interested in this for personal use. What do I need to look fo ron the label when purchasing oregeno oil from a store online? Should caryophyllene be listed specifically on the label? I'm just trying to figure out how I know that I'm buying the proper stuff...

I'm willing to try anythign when my neck issues flare up on me!! Please point me in the right direction on this one...
 
G

guest

I have to regroup on this.

Perhaps you would look for a "not intended for internal use" note on the label.

I suppose I could start selling the stuff.

I have a source of oil that is more than 90% carryophyllene. Made with an organic extraction process.

You have to thin it. It will produce a skin burn if used full strength. The maximum strength, as a topical application, is 8%.

$5 per gram. Minimum of 5grams. Would that be fair?

If folks are interested in that I'll get in a batch of the pure oil.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?term=
I can't get the link to work right. You'll have to enter caryophyllene[NM] in the search location.

Olive oil or hemp seed oil are good to use for diluting.
 
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