Are You Cannabis Deficient? (Fox News)

Shekwan

Kim Chi Quaffing Celt
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Straight from the Fair and Balanced Horse's Mouth:

Spoiler :

Are You Cannabis Deficient?

If the idea of having a marijuana deficiency sounds laughable to you, a growing body of science points at exactly such a possibility. Scientists have known that the active psychoactive compound in marijuana is THC, which is short for tetrahydrocannabinol.

In August 1990, researchers reported in the journal Nature the discovery of receptors in the brain that specifically accommodate the cannabinoids in pot. Cannabinoids bind to particular neurological sites in the brain, as though the brain was specifically designed to utilize this plant. Did nature toss cannabinoid receptors into the brain by random chance? Are cannabinoid receptors part of an intelligent design for deriving maximum benefit from cannabis? Is cannabis a divine elixir of sacred communion for which we are ideally suited? Actually, a more sober answer seems likely. When there are receptors in the brain for a particular type of compound, that compound is made in the brain. This is true of many important agents that work to transmit brain messages of all types. So a hunt began to find such a compound.

In that vein, in 1992 researchers in Israel isolated the cannabinoid anandamide in the human brain. Unlike THC, anandamide is manufactured in the brain, and is therefore an endogenous cannabinoid. This agent, anandamide, is the compound that attaches to the built-in cannabinoid receptors in our brains. The name anandamide is based on the Sanskrit word ananda, which means bliss. Anandamide is a bliss molcule, enhancing greater well being and emotional satisfaction.

Ever since the pioneering work of Dr. William O’Shaughnessy on cannabis and pain compiled in the 1840’s a growing body of science has shown that cannabis offers relief for various types of pain. In the brain, the endogenous agent anandamide also plays a role in mitigating inflammation and pain. So both cannabinoids from inside and outside the body play a role in pain reduction. More recent studies show pain relief among sufferers of multiple sclerosis when cannabis is consumed.

Anandamide also plays a role in proper appetite, feelings of pleasure and well-being, and memory. Interestingly, cannabis also affects these same functions. Cannabis has been used successfully to treat migraine, fibromyalgia, irritable bowel syndrome and glaucoma. So here is the seventy-four thousand dollar question. Does cannabis simply relieve these diseases to varying degrees, or is cannabis actually a medical replacement in cases of deficient anandamide?

At least one author, medical doctor Ethan Russo, believes in the possibility of endocanabinoid deficiency, and suggests that such a deficiency might actually be a significant cause of the types of health problems listed above. His paper “Clinical Cannabinoid Deficiency,” published in Neuroendocrinology Letters in 2004, delved deeply into the various ways that cannabinoids function in the body, and how a deficiency in cannabinoids can lead to a broad range of diseases. Since the publication of that paper, a number of studies have further confirmed the effectiveness of cannabis for many health disorders.

The idea of clinical cannabinoid deficiency opens the door to cannabis consumption as an effective medical approach to relief of various types of pain, restoration of appetite in cases in which appetite is compromised, improved visual health in cases of glaucoma, and improved sense of well being among patients suffering from a broad variety of mood disorders. As state and local laws mutate and change in favor of greater tolerance, perhaps cannabis will find it’s proper place in the home medicine chest.

http://health.blogs.foxnews.com/2010/03/10/are-you-cannabis-deficient/


Also, the article by Paul Armentano about the idea of "marijuana deficiency" from which I was led to the Fox News article:


Spoiler :
Not Feeling Well? Perhaps You’re ‘Marijuana Deficient’

For several years I have postulated that marijuana is not, in the strict sense of the word, an intoxicant.

As I wrote in the book Marijuana Is Safer: So Why Are We Driving People to Drink? (Chelsea Green, 2009), the word ‘intoxicant’ is derived from the Latin noun toxicum (poison). It’s an appropriate term for alcohol, as ethanol (the psychoactive ingredient in booze) in moderate to high doses is toxic (read: poisonous) to healthy cells and organs.

Of course, booze is hardly the only commonly ingested intoxicant. Take the over-the-counter painkiller acetaminophen (Tylenol). According to the Merck online medical library, acetaminophen poisoning and overdose is “common,” and can result in gastroenteritis (inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract) “within hours” and hepatotoxicity (liver damage) “within one to three days after ingestion.” In fact, less than one year ago the U.S. Food and Drug Administration called for tougher standards and warnings governing the drug’s use because “recent studies indicate that unintentional and intentional overdoses leading to severe hepatotoxicity continue to occur.”

By contrast, the therapeutically active components in marijuana — the cannabinoids — appear to be remarkably non-toxic to healthy cells and organs. Further, they mimic compounds our bodies naturally produce — so-called endocannabinoids — that are pivotal for maintaining proper health and homeostasis.

In fact, in recent years scientists have discovered that the production of endocannabinoids (and their interaction with the cannabinoid receptors located throughout the body) play a key role in the regulation of proper appetite, anxiety control, blood pressure, bone mass, reproduction, and motor coordination, among other biological functions.

Just how important is this system in maintaining our health? Here’s a clue: In studies of mice genetically bred to lack a proper endocannabinoid system the most common result is premature death.

Armed with these findings, a handful of scientists have speculated that the root cause of certain disease conditions — including migraine, fibromyalgia, irritable bowel syndrome, and other functional conditions alleviated by clinical cannabis — may be an underlying endocannabinoid deficiency.

Now, much to my pleasant surprise, Fox News Health columnist Chris Kilham has weighed in on this important theory.

Are You Cannabis Deficient?
via Fox News

If the idea of having a marijuana deficiency sounds laughable to you, a growing body of science points at exactly such a possibility.

… [Endocannabinoids] also play a role in proper appetite, feelings of pleasure and well-being, and memory. Interestingly, cannabis also affects these same functions. Cannabis has been used successfully to treat migraine, fibromyalgia, irritable bowel syndrome and glaucoma. So here is the seventy-four thousand dollar question. Does cannabis simply relieve these diseases to varying degrees, or is cannabis actually a medical replacement in cases of deficient [endocannabinoids]?

… The idea of clinical cannabinoid deficiency opens the door to cannabis consumption as an effective medical approach to relief of various types of pain, restoration of appetite in cases in which appetite is compromised, improved visual health in cases of glaucoma, and improved sense of well being among patients suffering from a broad variety of mood disorders. As state and local laws mutate and change in favor of greater tolerance, perhaps cannabis will find it’s proper place in the home medicine chest.

Perhaps. Or maybe at the very least society will cease classifying cannabis as a ‘toxic’ substance when its more appropriate role would appear to more like that of a supplement.

http://blogs.alternet.org/speakeasy/2010/03/23/not-feeling-well-perhaps-youre-marijuana-deficient/


Well, maybe those migraines or that irritable bowel could be caused by a deficiency in cannibanoids? Perhaps its time you went to pot? Maybe some weed tea in the morning along with those vitamins?

Opinions? Now that its coming from a nonbiased source, are you more likely to view the medicinal applications of cannabis favourably?
 
Can we just legalize it and tax the :):):):) out of it already?

Deficit gone.
 
Opinions? Now that its coming from a nonbiased source, are you more likely to view the medicinal applications of cannabis favourably?

No opinions on the science, as I haven't read this one through. I take offense to the need to bring up "intelligent design" and find steering a topic like this to evolution as pretty ignorant. Edit: Maybe not ignorant, but there's really no need to politicize something like this by bringing it to evolution, and the causes of evolution.

As a putative scientist (er wannabe), I've been trained to steer away from the mainstream media (liberal or otherwise) since they frequently misinterpret and misreport science. Modern science is complicated enough that the "drive-by" sound-bytes don't do it justice.
 
Mine is definitly overdosed :/
 
Can we just legalize it and tax the :):):):) out of it already?

Deficit gone.

A bit of a stretch @ bolded. Besides that, I agree completely.
 
No opinions on the science, as I haven't read this one through. I take offense to the need to bring up "intelligent design" and find steering a topic like this to evolution as pretty ignorant. Edit: Maybe not ignorant, but there's really no need to politicize something like this by bringing it to evolution, and the causes of evolution.

ERrrrr they did the exact opposite, dude - they should have brought up evolution in an attempt to explain why we have thc-receptors in the brain...

Instead they said stupid crap about intelligent design, which has nothing to do with evolution.
 
And I am sure that smoking a joint is the best way to get these medicinal properties into the body...
 
Just what the American population needs: a greater appetite and more lethargy inducing feelings of faux well-being. Super-stimulate me into oblivion.
 
Fox News Columnist advocating Marijuana use?

DOES NOT COMPUTE. :scan:
 
And I am sure that smoking a joint is the best way to get these medicinal properties into the body...

actually, a vaporizer probably is.

actually, a vaporizer in a sealed tent in my living room probably is. i call it the "high as bollocks time chamber"...er...health clinic.
 
Just what the American population needs: a greater appetite and more lethargy inducing feelings of faux well-being. Super-stimulate me into oblivion.

Actually when I smoke I usually go out and do something active.
 
And I am sure that smoking a joint is the best way to get these medicinal properties into the body...

No, tobacco is bad for you!

Like I said, some weed tea with perhaps some weed biscuits. Ain't no party like a cannabis tea party. Healthy too.

Actually when I smoke I usually go out and do something active.

I find it helps me to clean. Well, some strains do anyways.
 
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