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postheadericon Look inside the medical marijuana debate.

‘Clearing the Smoke’: The Benefits, Limits of Medical Marijuana

PBS tackles the question of the “legitimacy” of medical marijuana.

 

transcript:

JEFFREY BROWN: And finally tonight: the benefits and limitations of medical marijuana treatments.

Sixteen states have passed laws that allow patients to use the drug to treat side effects of various illnesses. But now some are moving to either limit or repeal those laws. One of them is Montana.

 

MEDICAL MARIJUANA USER: I used to be on approximately 14 different prescriptions, and I would still have up to 12 seizures a day. I used to have to take two handfuls of pills. No more.

ANNA RAU, Montana PBS: While this 27-year-old epilepsy patient in Montana is relieved to be taking medical marijuana…

WOMAN: I’m not using it to get any psychological effects off of it. I’m just eating the butter raw with bread.

ANNA RAU: … she’s considerably more anxious about showing her face, and has requested we conceal her identity.

Why do you not want to show your face?

MEDICAL MARIJUANA USER: I am not comfortable showing my face because of all of discrimination that has already happened.

ANNA RAU: She says both she and her husband have lost jobs when she spoke openly about using marijuana to treat her seizures.

Medical marijuana use has been legal in Montana since 2004, when voters there approved an initiative allowing doctors to recommend it to their patients. However, the federal government still classifies the plant as a schedule one drug. That makes it illegal for doctors to prescribe it, and it means state law doesn’t protect patients from federal arrest and prosecution.

MEDICAL MARIJUANA USER: But the fact of the matter is, somebody has to speak up, or nobody will hear these stories.

ANNA RAU: She told us her story in her artist’s studio. Here, she creates much happier works than she did even a few years ago, when her self-portraits plainly showed the toll epilepsy had taken since she was diagnosed at 15.

MEDICAL MARIJUANA USER: I have taken pretty much every anti-epileptic on the market, and some with a little bit more success than others.

ANNA RAU: None of them stopped her seizures, and, by her early 20s, the epilepsy had also spawned depression, anxiety and insomnia. She had to withdraw from college just a few credits short of a fine arts degree. Unable to hold a job, she was bed-bound for years while the epilepsy ruled her life.

MEDICAL MARIJUANA USER: It’s not a life, to live like that.

ANNA RAU: Then she remembered reading stories about the potential of cannabis to treat epileptic seizures, and she desperately wanted to try it, but her home state doesn’t have a medical marijuana law.

MEDICAL MARIJUANA USER: So, I did what I could do. I moved to a state where I could treat it myself.

ANNA RAU: Medical marijuana critic Dr. Eric Voth says the problem is, patients are treating themselves with a plant that’s voter-approved, not FDA-approved.

DR. ERIC VOTH, Institute on Global Drug Policy: So much of the medical excuse movement has come through ballot initiatives and legislative initiatives. And that’s not the way we bring medicines to market. We bring them to market through the FDA and a very careful process of proving safety and efficacy.

ANNA RAU: Dr. Voth is an addiction and pain specialist in Kansas, and he’s also the chairman of the Institute on Global Drug Policy. He says scientific research is the only legitimate route to understanding marijuana’s medical potential, not a hodgepodge of state laws and anecdotal stories.

He says, when patients smoke or ingest marijuana, they are getting a complex and largely unresearched mix of chemicals known as cannabinoids.

DR. ERIC VOTH: If we’re delivering THC, which is the major active ingredient, shouldn’t we be delivering that alone or other cannabinoids alone? But, in fact, what we’re doing is we’re delivering not only one, but 66 cannabinoids. On top of that, were delivering hundreds of contaminants.

ANNA RAU: This epilepsy patient says she’s willing to take the risk, because something in that cornucopia of substances has changed her life.

How did that impact your seizures?

MEDICAL MARIJUANA USER: They started slowing down. I had to build it up in my system. And it wasn’t until I started ingesting it that they really stopped completely.

DR. ERIC VOTH: I’m very suspicious about it because for someone to have been on 14 medications and not solve her problem, and then have this miraculous benefit from one medicine, I just find that suspect.

ANNA RAU: But the potential of marijuana to mitigate epileptic seizures has been recognized by the U.S. Institute of Medicine. The institute has released two reports on the therapeutic potential of cannabis.

The first report, from 1982, found “substantial evidence from animal studies to indicate that cannabinoids are effective in blocking seizures.” Scientists who wrote the 1999 report also found marijuana had anti-seizure effects, but doubted it could be developed into a pharmaceutical-grade epilepsy drug.

However, both reports detailed the promising ability of cannabis to treat pain and disease differently than conventional pharmaceuticals. That’s exactly what scientists at the California Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research found during several placebo-controlled clinical trials.

Dr. Igor Grant is the center’s director, and he says marijuana is not just an anti-nausea drug.

DR. IGOR GRANT, University of California, San Diego: I can say that the cannabinoids are almost certain to be useful in pain, based on the research that we have done, and probably have a place in muscle spasm.

DR. DONALD ABRAMS, University of California, San Francisco: Marijuana contains anti-inflammatory, anti-oxidant and probably anti-cancer compounds in it.

ANNA RAU: Dr. Donald Abrams is an oncology physician who conducted some of the center’s clinical research. He agrees the cannabis plant is a complex mix of substances, but he believes this is a medical benefit, not a detriment.

DR. DONALD ABRAMS: I’m a cancer doctor, and I often suggest to my patients that they consider marijuana for their loss of appetite, nausea, pain, depression and insomnia. It’s one medicine they could use, instead of five.

ANNA RAU: Critics like Dr. Voth are especially skeptical of these kinds of claims. How is it possible that one plant has the potential to impact so many different ailments?

Intriguing answers started appearing in the early ’90s, when researchers pinpointed receptors in the brain and the body that bind with cannabis. Receptors can be described as locks on the surface of a cell, and when the correct key binds with the correct lock, or receptor, it opens the door and delivers messages. Sometimes, the messages are urgent, for example, that the body is feeling pain, or that there’s an invader and the immune system must attack.

Researchers believe cannabinoids can turn down those messages, helping to temper chronic pain and autoimmune disorders. These special receptors are extremely abundant in the brain, but they are also found all over the body and in the major organs, the heart, the liver, kidneys and pancreas.

After finding all these locks that accepted the cannabis key, researchers made the next big discovery: The human body makes its own cannabinoids.

DR. DONALD ABRAMS: We have these circulating chemicals that we produce ourselves that really are very, very similar to the chemicals in the marijuana plant.

DR. PRAKASH NAGARKATTI, University of South Carolina: The only difference is that the cannabinoids that we produce are in such small quantities, and they’re also rapidly degraded, so that, therefore, we are not high all the time.

ANNA RAU: Dr. Prakash Nagarkatti is a professor of pathology and microbiology at the University of South Carolina. He’s one of many scientists in a race to unlock the mysteries of the receptors by using newly created synthetic drugs, instead of tightly restricted whole cannabis.

These synthetics have made research much easier and potentially lucrative. The U.S. patent database shows numerous large pharmaceutical companies have filed recent patents, claiming their cannabinoid receptor drug has the potential to treat almost everything: multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, rheumatoid arthritis, Tourette’s, epilepsy, heart disease, obesity, various mental illnesses and the Holy Grail of medicine, a cancer cure.

Dr. Nagarkatti and his team of researchers were one of the first labs to prove a cannabinoid key can seek out a cancerous cell in the immune system, unlock the receptor, and direct the cancer cell to self-destruct.

DR. PRAKASH NAGARKATTI: So, basically, telling the cells basically to commit suicide.

ANNA RAU: Dr. Nagarkatti’s experimental drug was able to eradicate almost 100 percent of the cancer in test tubes. And when they moved on to live mice:

DR. PRAKASH NAGARKATTI: To our surprise, we found that almost 25 to 30 percent of the mice completely rejected the tumor. They were completely cured.

ANNA RAU: Tumors in the rest of the mice shrank significantly. The results have been so promising that Dr. Nagarkatti is already beginning clinical trials with leukemia patients.

Dr. Voth believes researchers like Nagarkatti are headed in the right direction.

DR. ERIC VOTH: Let’s keep it in the corridors of science. Let’s keep it in the FDA. Let’s deliver what’s really medicine. That is the individual cannabinoids.

ANNA RAU: But this epilepsy sufferer says patients cannot afford to wait on science.

MEDICAL MARIJUANA USER: I don’t know how long it’s going to be before they really find out exactly what is working for me and for others.

ANNA RAU: Medical marijuana remains legal in Montana, for now. In April, lawmakers passed a full repeal of the law, but Gov. Brian Schweitzer vetoed it.

JEFFREY BROWN: Anna Rau’s one-hour documentary, “Clearing the Smoke: The Science of Cannabis,” is airing on many public television stations this summer.

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postheadericon Seedling Stage Lighting

Brian Asked:

When in this stage and useing CFL bulbs, what wattage should they be? Thanks

Brian honestly a window sill works great. But if for some reason that doesnt work for you, then just use your veg lighting close enough to your humidity dome/bag as not to cause any problems.

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postheadericon Marijuana and the Fountain of Youth.

marijuana and the fountain of youth

 

Marijuana and the fountain of youth?

Fulla NayakDoes marijuana have anti-aging properties? Well according to the family of the recently deceased Fulla Nayak, she claimed it did. Fulla Nayak who passed away at the age of 125 claimed that smoking cannabis daily was her secret to a long and healthy life. She also was a avid cigar conisuor, so we may need to take that into consideration.

 

 

 

There have been a few indications on the link between marijuana and anti-aging. In 2005 it was reported that marijuana use in rats was shown to decrease the propensity to get Alzheimer disease.

 

Dr. Robert Melamede, an associate professor at the University of Colorado, testified in court to the anti-aging effects of marijuana. Melamede also stated after his testimony:

“You can look at the harm caused by free radicals as biological friction or biological rust and the endocannabinoid system minimizes the impact of that and directly acts as an antioxidant as well as modifying the biochemistry in a way that minimizes the impacts,”

“I’m saying what science has now shown is that marijuana and cannabinoids are effective anti-aging agents which means that they are effective in minimizing the onset and the severity of age-related illnesses which include cognitive dysfunction things like Alzheimers, cardiovascular disease be it heart attacks, strokes, or clogged arteries.”

 

Gary Wenk, professor of Psychology and Neuroscience at The Ohio State University discusses here about the way cannaboids in marijuana can be used to counter the effects of aging by reducing the natural inflammation that aging has on the brain. He also uses coffee as a example which is good since I am also an avid coffee lover.

 

So does marijuana actually have anti-aging properties? It appears there is some very good indicators that is does. Yet where are the extensive studies? In 2009 a study was launched for Rapamycin a compound found in the soil Easter Island which was shown to possibly reduce the risk of cancer and heart disease. Yet Rapamycin has a very dangerous side effect of suppressing the bodies immune system.

 

Now marijuana has both cancer and heart disease reduction, plus the cognitive advantages of “oiling” the aging brain and preventing Alzheimer and other forms of dementia with no known negative side effects, yet once again there is no fanfare or research money for marijuana. I guess that comes with the stigma of having the nickname of “pot”.

 

Oh well, the best fountain of youth is the one that everyone else rejects. If you do not want our fountain of youth we will keep it for ourselves. Happy cannabis everyone and RIP Fulla Nayak.

 

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postheadericon Lighting

Alex Wrote:

I have 4 dif types of lights. fluorescent, halogen, plant bulb from wal-mart, and a sodium halide with no fixture. now to get the max payoff from my plants i know i need the sodium halide eventually. But can i still get a good amount from what i have ready?

Alex, florescent/halogen  lights work fine for growing marijuana. Make sure you use the suggested lighting spectrum and wattage’s for both the vegetative stage and flowering.

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postheadericon Marijuana Plants Falling Over

Water’n wrote:

why are all on my plants fallin over after they bust i try to do about 20 at a time i keep only the one that have strong steams but they keep fallin over some shoot up 7 in. some only 1 r 2 thats the one i keep i water them only if soil is dry but never let them go more than two days

Over watering marijuana plants is a common mistake when first growing marijuana. With that said there could be many factors that could contribute to your plants falling over. The most common reason is that your lights are too far away from your plants. If you are using CFL’s they should be an inch or so away from the tips of the plants. Other lights that produce high heat and wattage should be further away. Also try and put a fan inside your grow room on low. A nice gentle breeze can help strengthen your stems.

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postheadericon Marijuana growing disaster.

DBH wrote:

Heyy Owen Sup..iHave a question,Im a first time grower but I’ve grown past crops And they all ended up a disaster. I usually F’dd up on the seedling stage from having the tempature to hot And no fan, Do you have any advice?

During the seeding stage of any marijuana grow, humidity is the most important factor. If you think that the heat is killing them (must be awfully hot) then move them to out of the direct sunlight. If you are using the method in the guide, then the cover should take care of this part. If you think a fan would help, then by all means use one. It cannot hurt. My gut feeling is that you might be waiting to long before you transport them to their permanent grow room.

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postheadericon Android App – Weed Farmer

Android application for those of you that, for some ludicrous reason, cannot grow your own marijuana. Weed Farmer is a game that lets you get up and running growing your own high quality marijuana. Interesting enough but it also contains over 30 cannabis strains to pick from and looks addicting as hell. Unfortunately it is not for iPhone.

 

Looks like a blast to play.

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postheadericon Legalize it now.

legalize marijuana

legalize marijuana

Legalize Marijuana Now.

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