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Believe this? Painkillers May Ease Marijuana Side Effects

Tudo

Troublemaker
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GRRRRRRRRR


Painkillers May Ease Marijuana Side Effects
Pain relievers found in many medicine cabinets may help prevent some of the learning and memory problems often experienced by people who regularly use medical marijuana, a new study suggests.



In a series of experiments done on mice, researchers found they could prevent or lessen marijuana's cognitive side effects by giving the drug's active ingredient, a chemical called delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), in combination with either Celebrex, a prescription pain reliever, or ibuprofen, an over-the-counter nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID).
"Our findings suggest that the unwanted side effects of cannabis could be eliminated or reduced, while its beneficial effects can be retained," said study researcher Chu Chen, a professor of neuroscience at Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center in New Orleans. [Trippy Tales: The History of 8 Hallucinogens]
Chen said his team is planning to continue their research in humans in the near future, to see if the findings hold true.
The findings were published online today (Nov. 21) in the journal Cell.
Preventing side effects
Marijuana has been used as a medical treatment for a few thousand years, Chen said. The drug has been used to ease symptoms for everything from chronic pain and multiple sclerosis to cancer and seizure disorders.
However, the unwanted effects of cannabis greatly limit its medical use, Chen told LiveScience. So his research team set out to understand the molecular mechanisms underlying these adverse effects.
The researchers found that mice treated with THC had an increase in levels of a chemical called cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) in the hippocampus, a partof the brain involved in memory and learning.
"We uncovered the riddle of the marijuana-caused adverse effects, and its signaling pathway," Chen said.
This led the researchers to test the effects of giving the mice drugs that lower COX-2 levels, including Celebrex and ibuprofen.
The findings suggest that giving people a COX-2 inhibitor drug along with medical marijuana may help to reduce the memory and learning problems linked with its long-term treatment, the researchers said.
But further testing is needed in human clinical trials. At this point, it's still too early to determine the dose or frequency of Celebrex or ibuprofen that could be given to prevent marijuana-induced side effects, or to say when the pain relievers should be taken, Chen said.
Broader medical use
Marinol is the brand name of the prescription marijuana medication currently approved in the United Statesto treat the nausea and vomiting caused by chemotherapy.
But some people are put off by the memory loss, confusion and sleepiness that can come with regularly taking Marinol, which greatly limits its use.
Based on the new findings, researchers may be able to broaden the medical use of marijuana by reducing its undesirable effects while retaining its beneficial properties, Chen said.
Chen said he suspects his findings can be applied to both Marinol and the smokable form of medical marijuana, which is now legal in some states. But he cautioned that smoking pot may also affect the lungs, a reason why some pharmaceutical manufacturers have developed a spray form of cannabis that is spritzed into the mouth.
When asked whether these findings might apply to people who smoke pot recreationally, Chen said it depends on how much marijuana they use.
"The memory impairments occur only in people who use marijuana heavily," he said.
http://news.yahoo.com/painkillers-may-ease-marijuana-side-effects-172528974.html
 

PaullyHighBred

Active member
Me neither, its actually really interesting to think ibuprofen, might help with short term memory loss associated with cannabis use...
 

TheCleanGame

Active member
Veteran
This is a duplicate thread.

The researchers are giving the mice Dronabinol... not cannabis. Dronabinol is a THC-like synthetic chemical... called "Marinol" in pill form. There is NO CBD IN DRONABINOL.

It will seriously affect your memory. Cannabis with CBD in it will produce less memory loss... more CBD than THC and you'll see your memory improve.

This study is whack!

Keep it Clean! :D
 

BlueBlazer

What were we talking about?
Veteran
However, the unwanted effects of cannabis greatly limit its medical use...

Anyone who doesn't want their "effects" can donate them to me. I'm a hero like that.
picture.php
 

CosmicGiggle

Well-known member
Moderator
Veteran
I call bullshit!:moon:

I've always been an 'all day toker' with a high tolerance.

For many years I took ibuprofen on a daily basis and never noticed any change in the high.

Never any memory problems either.
 

supermanlives

Active member
Veteran
the memory loss is here to stay .I cant be blamed for forgetting stuff an I like it that way.it my right as a medicinal user. marinol didn't do shit for me. and I like my sesame oil in stir fry. what were we talkin about?
 

Stoner4Life

Medicinal Advocate
ICMag Donor
Veteran



golly! this is the kind of great news that makes we wanna go out and stock up my medicine cabinet all over again :yay:



EDIT:
for as many times the word 'marijuana' is used & the one time 'cannabis' is, I'd say we have a govt funded study here, shot in the dark. ;)


the memory loss is here to stay .I cant be blamed for forgetting stuff an I like it that way.it my right as a medicinal user. marinol didn't do shit for me. and I like my sesame oil in stir fry. what were we talkin about?

hell yeah supe!!! sometimes the only thing I have to look forward to is wondering how I'll fuck something up in my day, like forgetting a gallon of milk & having to go 22 miles round trip for it or go without.

cheap thrills.......


 
Last edited:

TheCleanGame

Active member
Veteran
They used the words marijuana and cannabis... yet the study didn't use cannabis at all.

That's what... deception? Fraud? Definitely incorrect.

Keep it Clean! :D
 

dank.frank

ef.yu.se.ka.e.em
ICMag Donor
Veteran
It's funny....for years and years and years across tens of thousands of patients - REDUCING - or fully eliminating their needs for pain medication, as a result of their cannabis use...

Now suddenly...this report surfaces that says - oh, look, you REALLY need to keep taking these pain meds...

Ummm...no. No I do not. That would in fact be why I smoke...

What a farce of a study...TheCleanGame has said it best...pure fraud.



dank.Frank
 

Stoner4Life

Medicinal Advocate
ICMag Donor
Veteran


I'd certainly eat less Cheetos if ibuprofen helped
to ease the side effect of 'the munchies'.......
 

mrcreosote

Active member
Veteran


I'd certainly eat less Cheetos if ibuprofen helped
to ease the side effect of 'the munchies'.......


Make sure you get the 'anal leakage free' Cheetos.
Shitting yer pants when high is not a glorious feeling and it wastes a ton of paper.
 
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