Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


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

UK: Cannabis spray blunts pain

Erica Klarreich

Nature

Tuesday 04 Sep 2001

---

Early trials suggest cannabis spritz may give relief to chronic pain
sufferers.

A spray that delivers the active ingredient of cannabis under the tongue
may ease chronic pain, preliminary clinical trials suggest.

Of the 23 patients who participated in the controlled study, only a few
failed to respond to the spray, William Nortcutt of James Paget Hospital
in Gorleston, UK told the British Association for the Advancement of
Science's Annual Festival of Science on Monday. Seventeen have gone on
to use the drug to treat their pain in the long term, he said.

"Some of the patients said it made a huge difference; others just said
it lets them sleep," Nortcutt said. "But when you're in chronic pain,
being able to sleep is one of the most important things."

Earlier clinical trials have also shown the pain-relieving benefits of
cannabis. But researchers have struggled to find a good way to deliver
the drug, says Roger Pertwee, a neuropharmacologist and cannabis expert
at the University of Aberdeen, UK.

"The study with a spray is very interesting," he says. "The past
clinical trials have been with pills, but absorption by swallowing is
very unreliable."

About half of the trial's participants had multiple sclerosis; the rest
suffered chronic pain from severe nerve damage and spinal-cord injuries.
Although a few of the multiple sclerosis patients had been using
cannabis to treat pain before the trials, most participants had seldom
or never used it.

The most common side-effect appeared to be dry mouth, Nortcutt reports.
Several patients experienced panic or a high during tests to find
appropriate dosages. Most preferred a drug in which the active
substance, tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), was mixed with another, less
psychoactive ingredient of cannabis. Previous clinical studies have
involved only pure THC, Pertwee says.

The research comes as many groups are pushing for cannabis to be
legalized for therapeutic use in the United Kingdom. If cannabis were to
be made legal, Nortcutt says, the path to approval might be much faster
than for typical drugs, which take an average of six years.

"There is a huge amount of anecdotal evidence that would help
scientists," Nortcutt told the Glasgow meeting. "We have to recognize
that cannabis has been used for 5,000 years." But much more work is
needed to understand how cannabis might be exploited as a pain
treatment, Nortcutt warned. "I wouldn't call for it to be prescribed
now."


 

 

 

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!