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View Full Version : Too Much Marijuana Makes Pain Worse, Not Better


midwestbluntman
10-24-2007, 05:04 AM
Although smoking "moderate" doses of cannabis helps reduce pain in healthy research volunteers, pain is actually increased at high doses, a new study shows.

The November issue of the journal Anesthesiology features a study showing that marijuana, or cannabis, reduces pain only within a smaller dose range.

"Our study suggests that there is a therapeutic window for analgesia, with low doses being ineffective, medium doses resulting in pain relief, and high doses increasing pain," said lead author Dr. Mark S. Wallace of University of California, San Diego, in a news release.

Wallace and colleagues evaluated the effects of smoking marijuana on pain responses in 15 healthy volunteers. On different days, the research subjects smoked low, medium, or high doses of cannabis (based on the content of 9-delta-tetrahydrocannabinol the main active chemical in marijuana), or an inactive placebo.

Pain was induced by injecting capsaicin, the "hot" chemical found in chili peppers, into the skin. Capsaicin injection is a standard technique used in pain studies, according to the authors.

Five minutes after smoking, none of the three doses of cannabis had any effect on pain responses to capsaicin. However, 45 minutes after smoking the moderate dose of cannabis, pain was significantly reduced — a pproximately six points lower on a 100-point scale, compared with the inactive placebo.In contrast, 45 minutes after smoking the high dose of cannabis, pain scores were increased — about eight points higher than with placebo.

The low dose of cannabis had no effect on pain scores. None of the three doses affected the spread of pain beyond the area injected with capsaicin.

Levels of THC measured in the blood were significantly related to reduced pain scores at the moderate dose of cannabis, but not to the increase in pain with high-dose cannabis. The volunteers' sense of feeling "high" increased with each dose of cannabis, even though the pain-relieving effects did not.

"With several states having passed laws legalizing the medical use of cannabis, there has been a call for more research on medicinal cannabis," said Wallace.

Wallace and colleagues call for further research, including studies of the clinical value of the pain-reducing effects. Based on this studies findings, Wallace said he would not recommend marijuana as a method of pain reduction at this time.

Dawg
10-24-2007, 07:18 AM
Uhm....:hmmmm:
Ok I if do not take a whole pain killer my pain won't be reduced much. If I take 1-2 then my pain will lessen...if I take 50 pain killers I'll be dead.
So due to these findings I should not be recommended in taking pain killers until further studies are made? Do I have this right? :p

gorilla
10-24-2007, 11:07 AM
lol, right dawg? At least these people who kept smoking pot didn't suffer any health effects from it. Hell, if you're in pain and you keep taking pills to make it go away... it doesn't take long before nausea sets in, and your puking, and your attitude sucks, and you need to keep taking more pills because for whatever reason you body is addicted to that shitty dope feeling.

legalize pot, god damnit. haha

CB
10-24-2007, 11:18 AM
what a crack head study lmfao

Pain was induced by injecting capsaicin, the "hot" chemical found in chili peppers, into the skin. Capsaicin injection is a standard technique used in pain studies, according to the authors.

maybe they should test it with tazers too :rolleyes:

pain from a hot pepper is NOTHING like nerve pain IMHO

mac
10-24-2007, 11:19 AM
so basically they are confirming the ability to self dose is a good thing.

thanks guys.

midwestbluntman
10-24-2007, 06:46 PM
"With several states having passed laws legalizing the medical use of cannabis, there has been a call for more research on medicinal cannabis,"


"Our study suggests that there is a therapeutic window for analgesia, with low doses being ineffective, medium doses resulting in pain relief, and high doses increasing pain,"


Wallace and colleagues call for further research, including studies of the clinical value of the pain-reducing effects. Based on this studies findings, Wallace said he would not recommend marijuana as a method of pain reduction at this time.

more government propaganda to try to reverse/over rule/manipulate the voters decision to allow mmj,atleast thats what i got from it.

sombro
10-24-2007, 11:04 PM
everyone knows that a large dose of doob can cause anxiety in those not used to it. this would also reflect itself in the participants reaction to the pain.

they are asking people to take a drug that alters sensory perception and then report on how they percieve their senses to be reacting. it's for that rather than for the methods used that this study is bunkum.