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Medicinal Cannabis, “Cannabinoid Family,” and Cancer Study

Tuesday, October 8, 2013



A Little Cannabis History ...

Cannabis has actually been made use of for medical purposes dating back a minimum of 3,000 years.

It was in the 1840s when marijuana was first introduced to Western medicine by W.B. O'Shaughnessy, a medical doctor who worked in India for the British East Indies Company. Back then marijuana was an useful treatment choice for analgesic, sedative, anti-inflammatory, antispasmodic, and anticonvulsant perks.

The United States Treasury Division introduced the Marihuana Tax Act in 1937. This Act enforced a levy of $1 an ounce of medical marijuana and $100 an ounce for leisure use. In the United States, the medical physicians were the principle challengers of this Act.

The American Medical Association (AMA) opposed the Act since medical professionals needed to pay an unique tax for recommending medical marijuana, utilize special order types to acquire it, and additional record-keeping for recommending it.

Likewise, the AMA turned down the "concept" that cannabis was damaging and they understood that by taking on the Act it would further hamper scientific science into marijuana' medical value. In 1942, marijuana was removed from the United States' Pharmacopoeia.

Then in 1951, Congress passed the Boggs Act, which classified marijuana with unlawful and unsafe narcotic drugs. And in 1970, with the adoption of the Controlled Substances Act, marijuana was then classified as a Schedule 1 drug by Federal Law.

Drugs that are classified as a "Schedule 1" drug are unlawful and said to have "no accepted medical use," and various other drugs in this classification consist of heroin, mescaline, methaqualone, and gamma-hydroxybutyrate.

Cannabis was (and still is) classified as having no medical use by the United States government, even though marijuana was distributed to clients in a federal project developed in 1978 called the Compassionate Use Investigational New Drug program.

The program was stopped in 1992.


What Are Cannabinoids and How Do They Work?

"Cannabinoids" is a blanket term covering a "family" of complex-chemicals that lock onto cannabinoid receptors (which are protein molecules on the surface of cells). The marijuana plant produces a resin, which contains this big, psychoactive "cannabinoid family" of chemical compounds.

For 1000s of years humans have made use of marijuana for medical and leisure purposes, just cannabinoids themselves were first extracted from marijuana plants in the 1940s. The structure of the cornerstone of marijuana-- delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)-- was discovered in the 1960s.

It had not been till the late 1980s that scientist discovered the first cannabinoid receptor, quickly followed by an additional discovery: humans establish cannabinoid-like chemicals within our bodies, called endocannabinoids.

The toughest potency of cannabinoids is found in the female flowers of the marijuana plant.


"Cannabinoid Household," Cannabis and Cancer Disease Research

Medicinal marijuana and cancer science have been restricted since the plant is a Schedule 1 drug in addition to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has actually not granteded the use of marijuana as a treatment choice for any condition.

marijuana cancer cells science The 2 Big Cs Just recently, acknowledgment has actually been made by the National Cancer cells Institute (NCI) acknowledging the perks of making use of marijuana for people coping with cancer cells consist of antiemetic effects, hunger excitement, discomfort relief, and enhanced sleep.

The NCI is a leader presenting patient to medical science to assist make sure that brand-new treatment discoveries are translated into prospective marijuana and cancer cells treatments. This acknowledgment has actually helped sustain a "brand-new world" of organic medicines starting with medical cannabis and cancer to be frequently accepted as a treatment choice.

"When cannabis restores its place in the United States Pharmacopeia, a status it lost after the passage of the Cannabis Tax Act of 1937, it will be seen as some of the safest drugs because compendium," according to Lester Grinspoon, Associate Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School.


Let's Wrap-up Cannabis and Cancer Cells

This summary will provide a fast summary of medical marijuana and it being readily available for clients as a herbal treatment choice for cancer cells.

Some vital details to recap:

  1. Marijuana has in fact been made use of for medicinal purposes for centuries.
  2. Cannabinoid-based pharmaceutical medicines are commercially available, such as dronabinol and nabilone, are APPROVED by the FDA (!?!?) to be prescribed by physicians as a medical treatment.
  3. Chemical components of marijuana, called cannabinoids, trigger specific receptors located throughout the body to create pharmacologic response, specifically in the main nervous system and the immune system.
  4. The possession and use of marijuana is unlawful by federal law in the United States (and numerous locations around the world too).


There are very important legal differences between medical marijuana at the federal and state levels in the United States of America. Still at the federal level marijuana has actually been made unlawful by the Controlled Substances Act, just since 2009, brand-new federal standards have been enacted.

According to United States Attorney General Eric Owner, "it will not be a concern to utilize federal resources to take to court clients with serious diseases or their caregivers who are adhering to state laws on medical marijuana."

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