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Calif. research shows pot can ease muscle spasms

justalilrowdy

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Associated Press
In the S.F paper today..

Calif. research shows pot can ease muscle spasms
By LISA LEFF, Associated Press Writer
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
(02-17) 17:22 PST Sacramento, Calif. (AP) --
The first U.S. clinical trials in more than two decades on the medical benefits of marijuana confirm pot is effective in reducing muscle spasms associated with multiple sclerosis and pain caused by certain neurological injuries or illnesses, according to a report issued Wednesday.

Igor Grant, a psychiatrist who directs the Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research at the University of California, San Diego, said five studies funded by the state involved volunteers who were randomly given real marijuana or placebos to determine if the herb provided relief not seen from traditional medicines.

"There is good evidence now that cannabinoids may be either an adjunct or a first-line treatment," Grant said at a news conference where he presented the findings.

The California Legislature established the research center in 2000 to examine whether the therapeutic claims of medical marijuana advocates could withstand scientific scrutiny. In 1996, state voters became the first in the nation to pass a law approving pot use for medical purposes.

Thirteen other states have followed suit, but California is the only one so far to sponsor medical marijuana research. After 10 years and nearly $9 million, the Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research is preparing to wrap up its work next year.

Along with the studies on muscle spasms and pain associated with spinal cord injuries and AIDS, the center also has funded research on how marijuana affects sleep and driving, limb pain due to diabetes, and whether inhaling vaporized cannabis is as effective as smoking it.

A laboratory study supported by the center examined if pot could be helpful in treating migraine headaches and facial pain. In that study, rats given a cannabis-like drug exhibited reduced activity of nerve cells that transmit pain.

State Sen. Mark Leno, a San Francisco Democrat who chairs a budget subcommittee on health and human services and supports medical marijuana, said he doubted there would be more financial support for the center, given California's ongoing budget crisis.

The federal government classifies marijuana as an illicit drug with no medical use but produces the only pot legally available for scientific research under a contract with the University of Mississippi.

Grant said obtaining some of the Mississippi crop and meeting the complex security regulations required by the Drug Enforcement Agency and other federal agencies was time-consuming and cumbersome.

Grant, however, had no problem with the quality of the government's supply. Its consistency was helpful in determining that patients who smoked less-potent marijuana enjoyed the same amount of pain relief but less mental confusion than those who inhaled a more powerful strain, he said.

Such quality control is notably absent from the marijuana that patients with a doctor's recommendation can legally obtain in California through hundreds of cooperatives and storefront dispensaries, Grant said.

He said more research was needed on how pot works and its side effects.

"Because we don't know the composition of the strains that are on the street, we don't know what patients really are getting," he said. "As a doctor I feel some discomfort when someone says take X or Y pill or herb because we think that might be helpful."

Since its founding, the center has approved 15 research studies, but five had to be discontinued because there were not enough volunteers willing or able to meet the criteria for participating.

One proposed study on the effectiveness of marijuana in reducing chemotherapy-related nausea was canceled because researchers could not recruit enough cancer patients who weren't already treating their symptoms effectively with anti-nausea medications.

In the 24-page report submitted Wednesday to the Legislature, Grant said research protocols had been rigorous, with six studies published or accepted for publication in peer-reviewed science journals.

In four studies, participants suffering from multiple sclerosis, AIDS or diabetes, along with healthy volunteers injected with a chili pepper substance to induce pain, were randomly assigned to receive cigarettes filled with marijuana. Half had the active ingredient delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, removed.

Not every patient who smoked the real marijuana reported improvement. But the percentage who did was comparable to those who said they experienced relief from antidepressants and other medications commonly prescribed for neuropathic pain, the study said.

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/artic...al/a135904S14.DTL&feed=rss.news#ixzz0fto4bFtC
 

xfargox

Member
You guys should check out the entire pdf, it's got some pretty interesting findings.

It's been posted on the site numerous times... don't have the link with me though.
 
J

jayburtonboy

This is exactly wat we need! All the facts are indisputable and once the man is on board we can tell them to take their tax and shove it up their ass. Well grow our own!!!
 

bageled j

Member
Finally.I am Tourette's Syndrome patient and mmj is the only thing that stops my ticing.i have taken SO many different types of meds trying to find one that will stop my tics.the ONLY one that works is marijuana.first time i tried it at 12 i knew that this was for me.it was the first time in my life i didnt feel as if everyone and there mom was staring at me.they weren't as i wasn't ticing.LOL.WOOT!!!A TRUE GOD SENT!!!I LOVE CANNABIS!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
W

Wasabi420

my buddy used to have restless leg syndrome (a sort of muscle leg spasm at night time) after he started smoking weed this magically disappeared. Coincidence? I think not
 
G

Guest 88950

cannabis is the only thing that helps with my spasms and im glad i found that out 10 yrs ago.

if this type of research was embraced by the us govt and the medical society then i would have been educated by my neurologist instead of me educating him on how cannabis stops my spasms.

being in fla my doc doesnt want me to show up to my appt w/o smoking and then take a few hits in his office so he can see first hand how quick the spasms stop.

no spasms within minuits

Cannabis is medicine, recognized or not.
 

Flying Goat

Member
I hear you all talking & agree completely. The only way we can fight this present situation is to find ways to circumvent the system's ability to limit & control research.

I have been keeping records of strains which work on specific symptoms, etc. for over 20 years. None of this has any value until the FDA & DEA butt out & "real" research is allowed to proceed.

Barring that, our only other "proof" that medical MJ relieves our invisible symptoms (migraine, muscle spasm, pain, etc.) is by providing up-front, in-your-face proof of how MJ relieves spasticity of cerebral palsy (including stuttering speech) and other of the VISIBLE afflictions successfully treated by MJ.

Anyone with symptoms such as Bagel's Tourette's, cerebral palsy, or tremors which are successfully treated by medical MJ, please PM me.

My group, Alabamians for Compassionate Care (ACC) is presently working to get HB207 (Michael Phillips bill) heard in front of our Judiciary Committee in Montgomery this March. If you are interested in testifying and/or providing a video of your symptoms before, during, & after you medicate, please contact me.

We are facing a desperate battle down here, as I'm sure most of you realize. Only irrefutable, video or live evidence is enough for these people. Printed facts & figures are too easy to ignore.

I'm sure your expenses will be covered 100% by ACC, which has the backing of NORML & DPA (Drug Policy Alliance).

This is your chance to REALLY make a difference! Please help.
 

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