The use of cannabis (marijuana) as a medical treatment has been around for thousands of years. In its earliest form, the cannabis plant was utilized by medical healers to treat various diseases that did not have a cure, particularly challenging to treat pain syndromes, general illnesses, and rheumatism. Despite its routine use spanning the millennia, early in the mid-20th century, the regular use of cannabis as a medical treatment was disrupted by strong political influences. Ultimately, the stigma that was created from the taxation and illegality of cannabis use in the 1930s led to tight sanctions and regulations in 1970 with the creation of the Controlled Substances Act. This legislation placed cannabis on a list of drugs that were defined by the federal government to possess no acceptable medical use, have a high potential for abuse and remain illegal for general use.
Despite the tight control, advocates of the medicinal use of cannabis continued to pursue the science and understanding of the medical properties. It was eventually discovered that humans possess an intrinsic endocannabinoid system, much like the body’s natural opioid system, where certain neurobiologic chemicals were responsible for similar effects as using cannabis. When active, the neurochemicals in our body play a role in normal day-to-day processes such as inflammation, pain, and mood. Alterations to this natural system could occur if a person were to use cannabis producing the desired effects of mood enhancement, pain reduction, and muscle relaxation.
Scientific discovery and research has helped us understand that there are over 100 natural cannabinoids in the cannabis plant that likely play a role in controlling things in the body such as pain, mood, and metabolism. The two most well understood cannabinoids are tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabidiol (CBD). THC is the cannabinoid most likely responsible for the psychologic effects or ‘high’ that people feel when using cannabis, but has also been shown to have pain relieving properties. CBD is the cannabinoid most likely responsible for the anti-inflammatory and pain reducing properties people experience. Despite the wholistic natural properties of plant-based cannabis, there are real serious health risks that are present with its use that can affect the body’s organs, including the heart, lungs, gastrointestinal system, and brain/nervous system.
The rich and storied history of cannabis use and illegality has been driven mostly by social and political factors and not science. Under the assertion of states’ rights, nearly 30 states and the District of Columbia have some form of medical marijuana program, despite the fact that the federal government still views cannabis as not medically useful and its use continues to be illegal under federal jurisdiction. It is encouraged that each patient understands the rules and regulations pertaining to medical cannabis use in the state in which they reside. There are qualifying conditions that have been established (state-dependant) to obtain certified medical cannabis. Unfortunately, there are no universally accepted guidelines regarding the right time to consider medical cannabis for the treatment of pain. Given that we have very good data on most of the typical pain treatments to date, many practitioners consider medical cannabis as a last line therapy.
To summarize, the investigation, research and understanding of medical cannabis and its impact on pain continues to grow. Further studies are needed to evaluate the most appropriate doses, side-effects, and effectiveness of therapy in pain patients.
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Most physicians have minimal understanding and education of the medical benefits of thc and cbd both physically and emotionally the training physicians receive to be eligible to write scripts is minimal the bud tenders at dispensaries are extremely knowledgeable about which strains work best for different conditions and different for each person. They will even provide step by step directions for use. They are always eager to assist you with any and all questions. I have found this true at every dispensary visited. They don’t make me feel stupid or drug seeking and and totally supportive and don’t expect me to know what I’m doing It’s an entirely different and better experience than seeing most doctors. Good luck
yes i get paranoia with my gummies and when come down 4 hours pain is back it sucks and seem not to sleep very little like 3 hours give or take hard to work with that any idea for starters its 1:1 1 gummy= 20mg so should i try 1/2 ?
Greg, I recommend you try tincture instead of gummies and you don’t say what ratio of THC to CBD you’re using. Gummies take too long to work. Vaping is actually to quickest method. I’ve never had sleep issues either before or after my back injury. In a day I take approximately 1200mg CBD and 400-600mg THC. I buy my THC cape cartridges at a dispensary and CBD from FiveCBD.com. Dispensaries don’t sell high enough Cbd products in Pa.
wow thar sounds like a lot mine was 20 mg 1:1 thc . cbg
tks for the info
This replaces oxycodone that I was taking 6x day. I’m not complaining.
I’ve been on pain medication for 28 years. I’m terrified to try and get off of it now at my age. 68 years old. Did you use OxyContin everyday? Do you use medical cannabis? Anything you can share. Would be so appreciated.
I was in your shoes too for 15 yrs. I was switched from Tyl #4 to morphine long acting caps then to Buprenorphine patch every 7 days for my chronic pain. I still had been using Percocet for breakthrough pain but cannabis stopped my need for it. After a year of experimenting I now use cannabis tincture 1:1 strength CBD/THC 3x day and double my dose at bedtime. I vape micro-dosing between my tincture doses. Acute pain meds were never meant to treat chronic pain. More to follow.
https://www.apa.org/news/podcasts/speaking-of-psychology/medical-marijuana
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18503626/,
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4675640/,
https://www.mayoclinic.org/chronic-pain-medication-decisions/art-20360371
I wish I could afford it but the tincture costs 50$ go 30 ml. In addition you must see a doctor to have your prescription renewed yearly
If you have chronic pain you cannot go off narcotics but I’m surprised your doctor has kept you on this for so long. There is a formula that doctors use to switch you from a codeine to another opiate meant to treat chronic pain. If buprenorphine works for you you may or may not have any breakthrough pain requiring anything additional. If you have traditional Medicare and a plan D you can get buprenorphine covered by Medicare. In my state unfortunately the coinsurance is not cheap. My pain control is my only job other than picking up after my cat and cooking our food.