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UK: Cannabis Compound Slows Artery Disease in Mice

Patricia Reaney

Reuters

Wednesday 06 Apr 2005

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LONDON (Reuters) - An active ingredient in cannabis can ease inflammation
and slow the progression of coronary artery disease in mice, and possibly
humans, researchers said on Wednesday.

Daily low doses of the ingredient, THC, prevented atherosclerosis, a
primary cause of heart disease and stroke in western countries, without
producing the associated high.

"We have proven that very low doses of cannabis therapy will have an
anti-inflammatory effect that will slow the progression of atherosclerosis
in mice," said Dr Francois Mach, of Geneva University Hospital in Switzerland.

He and his team do not know whether TCH, or delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol,
will have the same effect in humans. But they believe the discovery will
help find compounds that produce the same effect in humans without side
effects such as raised blood pressure or euphoria.

"The goal now is to find new molecules, new compounds, that will act only
on this anti-inflammatory effect," Mach told Reuters. Atherosclerosis is a
common disorder of the arteries. Fatty materials build up and eventually
block the arteries and interfere with blood flow.

THC and similar molecules are known as cannabinoids. Cannabis, which
contains more than 60 different cannabinoids, and hashish have been used
for centuries for medicinal purposes.

Mach and his team gave mice which were genetically engineered to be prone
to atherosclerosis very low oral doses of THC with food each day. The dose
was about 10 times less than that from smoking cannabis.

"It is the first study showing any beneficial effect of cannabis therapy on
atherosclerosis," said Mach.

Cannabis creates a high when it binds to receptors called CB1 on the
surface of cells in the brain. In the mouse study, another receptor, CB2,
which is found on immune system cells and has nothing to do with euphoria,
was affected. The dose given to the mice was too low to create a sense of
euphoria.

Mice given THC had a slower progression of the disease than other mice not
given the compound. The scientists are now studying whether THC can prevent
the illness in the rodents.

"We are planning to look in more detail into how cannabis interferes with
inflammation," said Mach.

"What we have proven in mice is that acting on this receptor 2 ... has an
anti-inflammatory effect that is very beneficial against the development of
atherosclerosis."

In a commentary on the research in Nature magazine, Michael Roth, of the
University of California in Los Angeles, described the findings as striking.

"But they should not be taken to mean that smoking marijuana is beneficial
for the heart," he said.

On the contrary it increases the pulse rate and causes sharp rises and then
falls in blood pressure upon standing and walking.

The Netherlands was the world's first country to make cannabis available as
a prescription drug for cancer, HIV and multiple sclerosis (MS). In the
United States it is used to treat weight loss in AIDS patients and nausea
and vomiting in cancer sufferers.

In Britain, GW Pharmaceuticals Plc has been pioneering cannabis-based medicine


 

 

 

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