Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

US: Marijuana helps patients stay on medication

Reuters

Wednesday 13 Sep 2006

---

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Recovering drug addicts who are infected with
hepatitis C virus may stick to their medications better if they are
allowed to use marijuana, U.S. researchers reported on Wednesday.

Smoking or eating cannabis may help them tolerate the side effects of
the antivirals, which can clear the virus but often cause fevers,
chills, and muscle and joint aches, the researchers said.

Diana Sylvestre and colleagues at the University of California, San
Francisco tested 71 recovering substance users given interferon and
ribavirin to treat their hepatitis C -- which is common among injecting
drug users.

About a third of the patients also used marijuana.

Half of the marijuana users were successfully treated with the
antivirals, versus 18 percent of those who did not use cannabis, the
researchers reported in the European Journal of Gastroenterology and
Hepatology.

And just 14 percent of the cannabis users relapsed, compared to 61
percent of non-smokers.

"It may in fact be an ironical truth that those persons who contracted
hepatitis C virus through a form of illicit drug use may be aided in
ridding themselves of this potentially fatal virus by the use of another
drug in addition to their HCV therapy," Benedikt Fischer of the Center
for Addictions Research of British Columbia in Canada wrote in a commentary.

The hepatitis C virus damages the liver and can kill people if not
treated. A combination of interferon, to boost immune response, and
ribavirin, to attack the virus, can help clear it from the liver, but it
can take months.

"The majority of patients develop significant treatment-related side
effects, with almost 80 percent experiencing an initial flulike syndrome
that includes fevers, chills, and muscle and joint aches," the
researchers wrote.

They are often given a range of drugs to treat the side effects,
including medications to stop vomiting, analgesics, antihistamines and
sleeping pills.

Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.






 

 

 

After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.




This page was created by the Cannabis Campaigners' Guide.
Feel free to link to this page!