Insangu medical chronic pain clinic

Insangu medical chronic pain clinic The page offers clinical study information with regards to the legitimate use of Cannabinol/thc formulations as an adjuvant to treat chronic pain.

Cannabinoids in Medicine: LimitlessHope or Hype?Christoph RenningerMay 12, 2022What is the role of cannabinoids as an in...
27/07/2022

Cannabinoids in Medicine: Limitless
Hope or Hype?

Christoph Renninger
May 12, 2022

What is the role of cannabinoids as an intoxicant and in medical applications today? This was the question addressed by Dieter Braus, MD, psychiatrist and neurologist at Vitos Clinic Rheingau in Eltville, Germany, at the DGIM Congress 2022.
Dampening the Dopamine System

Regardless of the type of substance-dependent addiction — whether alcohol, opiates, ni****ne, or cannabinoids — the brain pathway is the same: the dopamine system. This system is also responsible for curiosity, desire, learning, and actions. Various substances lead to increased neurotransmitter release.
The endocannabinoid system acts as a damper on this system. System stabilization is inhibited by the high-affinity binding of delta (9)-trans-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) to CB1 receptors. The psychotropic component of cannabis naturally accounts for 1%–2% of the active substance. However, this proportion has now increased to 10%­–20% as a result of selective breeding. At the same time, the proportion of cannabidiol (CBD), the nonpsychoactive counterpart, has fallen.
In addition to the acute THC effect with a high and pleasant feeling, chronic consumption produces different effects. Retrograde signaling pathways are disrupted, leading to addictive behavior, reduced motivation, and negative emotionality. These chronic effects may even occur after only a few instances of consumption.
Deep brain regions, such as the hippocampus, substantia nigra, amygdala, and hypothalamus, have the greatest densities of CB1 receptors. These regions are all involved in stress-related illnesses, including anxiety disorders, depression, and obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Psychosis Risk

Cannabis consumption may lead to impaired cognition, reduced motivation, and psychosis triggers because of an imbalance in important systems, especially if cannabis is consumed during vulnerable brain development phases.
Daily cannabis consumption leads to a fivefold increase in the risk of developing a psychotic disorder. Several countries have seen a strong increase in psychoses after legalization. For this reason, Braus expressed a critical view of legalization.
He advocated for a minimum age of 21 years for legalization because consumption before the age of 18 years has severe effects on the development of the dopaminergic system. Use during adolescence has significant effects on cognitive performance as an adult.
It leads to attention deficits, high distractibility, lower learning ability, impaired verbal expression, and issues with math and other memory functions. Even after just one or two uses, structural changes can be detected in the brain, and particularly in the medial prefrontal cortex.
This adverse brain development contributes to the formation of anxiety networks, with increased irritability and a tendency toward anxiety disorders. Braus stated that it is alarming to think that 1 in every 3 10th-graders in the United States has already tried cannabis.
Use in Neuropsychiatry

As a result of the pathophysiology, the endocannabinoid system is a potential treatment target for various illnesses, pain, inflammations, depression, anxiety disorders, and cancer. Basic research has been conducted on many of these areas, but there is often still a lack of evidence.
In the largest meta-analysis to date on medical use, 79 studies recruited 6462 patients, which Braus described as a manageable number. This provided moderate evidence for the use of cannabis in the treatment of chronic pain and spasms. There is a small amount of evidence for the reduction of nausea and vomiting during chemotherapy and for weight gain, sleep disorders, and Tourette syndrome.
All applications led to short-term adverse events, including dizziness, dry mouth, nausea, disorientation, confusion, hallucinations, and metabolic disorders.
More recent reviews, for example from the field of psychiatry, have not drawn any clear conclusions, often because studies have not been methodical enough. Additionally, the number of drugs with varying THC contents makes regulation difficult.
Summary for Neuropsychiatry

Braus summarized his lecture by making the following points:
Legalization of cannabis is linked with increased consumption, even in older generations.
Particular caution is urged regarding use in adolescents (because of effects on the anxiety network).
The drug is associated with an increased risk for psychosis.
Even mild cannabis consumption at age 13-16 years is linked with a threefold risk increase.
Intrauterine cannabis consumption can lead to reduced brain growth.
There is moderate evidence on use for chronic pain and spasms.
There have been no conventional pivotal studies, but lots of anecdotes. However, there is great potential in theory.

This article was translated from German and was published on Coliquio .
Medscape - May 12, 2022.

A large meta-analysis provides moderate evidence for the use of cannabis in the treatment of chronic pain and spasms. Other data indicate a link between cannabis use and risk for psychotic disorder.

27/07/2022

There are few subjects that can stir up stronger emotions among doctors, scientists, researchers, policy makers, and the public than medical ma*****na.

Is it safe?
Should it be legal?
Decriminalized?
Has its effectiveness been proven?
What conditions is it useful for?
Is it addictive?
How do we keep it out of the hands of teenagers?
Is it really the "wonder drug" that people claim it is?
Is medical ma*****na just a ploy to legalize ma*****na in general?

27/07/2022

Ma*****na without the high

Least controversial is the extract from the h**p plant known as CBD (which stands for cannabidiol) because this component of ma*****na has little, if any, intoxicating properties. CBD-dominant strains have little or no THC, so patients report very little if any alteration in consciousness.

Ma*****na itself has more than 100 active components.

THC (which stands for tetrahydrocannabinol) is the chemical that causes the "high" that goes along with ma*****na consumption.

Patients do, however, report many benefits of CBD, from relieving insomnia, anxiety, spasticity, and pain to treating potentially life-threatening conditions such as epilepsy.

One particular form of childhood epilepsy called Dravet syndrome is almost impossible to control but responds dramatically to a CBD-dominant strain of ma*****na called Charlotte’s Web.

27/07/2022

Uses of medical ma*****na
The most common use for medical ma*****na in the United States is for pain control.

While ma*****na isn’t strong enough for severe pain (for example, post-surgical pain), it is quite effective for the chronic pain relating to inflammatory and osteoarthritis.

Part of its allure is that it is clearly safer than opiates (it is impossible to overdose on and far less addictive) and it can take the place of NSAID that have usual issues with kidneys or ulcers or GERD.

In particular, ma*****na appears to ease the pain of multiple sclerosis, and nerve pain in general.
This is an area where few other options exist, and those that do, such as Neurontin, Lyrica, or opiates are highly sedating. Patients claim that ma*****na allows them to resume their previous activities without feeling completely out of it and disengaged.

Along these lines, ma*****na is said to be a fantastic muscle relaxant, and people swear by its ability to lessen tremors in Parkinson’s disease.

I have also heard of its use quite successfully for fibromyalgia, endometriosis, interstitial cystitis, and most other conditions where the final common pathway is chronic pain.

Ma*****na is also used to manage nausea and chronic illness related weight loss (hiv wasting syndrome) and can be used to treat glaucoma.

Medical ma*****na is also reported to help patients suffering from pain and wasting syndrome associated with HIV, as well as irritable bowel syndrome and Crohn’s disease.
�The study linked above shows that THC is not needed for the effects that people look for when using CBD, it is THC that is truly illegal in most places around the world, and it is THC that is used to get a high, remove this element and the drug is far less likely to be abused, CBD is also known for helping with drug addictions and hold zero addictive properties.

27/07/2022

Cancer pain:

For cancer pain a multicenter randomized controlled trial (RCT) involving 360 patients investigated oral cannabis to treat breakthrough cancer pain in subjects who were started on long-acting opioids. It showed analgesic efficacy in the low- and medium-dose ranges that were also well tolerated. Three additional RCTs, including 100 subjects in total of inhaled cannabis for chronic intractable neuropathic pain due to multiple etiologies, showed efficacy for smoked and vaporized cannabis.15

Dosing depends on individual patient needs and tolerance of side effects. A general principal of dosing is to start low and go slow. Routes of delivery include oral route, mucosal, topical, re**al, and inhalation. Vaporization has the advantage of rapid onset of effects and easy titration. Oral ingestion of cannabis has a delayed onset of action, compared to other routes, so titration is more difficult. In the palliative care setting, cannabinoids are generally used to treat pain, nausea/vomiting, anorexia, insomnia, fatigue, and neuropathy. Common side effects include xerostomia, drowsiness, dizziness, nausea, confusion, dysphoria, anxiety, and acute psychosis. Cannabis ingestion increases the risk of motor vehicle accidents (MVAs).15

The use of the standardized extracts of cannabis has been shown to relieve the symptoms of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), cancer chemotherapy, and multiple sclerosis (Ellis et al., 2009; Haney, Rabkin, Gunderson, & Foltin, 2005). There are also studies showing positive effects on chronic pain and glaucoma (e.g., Ware et al., 2010). The availability of various THC/CBD dose ratios is worth mentioning. For instance, Bedrocan® contains 22% THC and

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