Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


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

Cannabis 'munchies' inspire diet drug

The BBC

Thursday 15 Aug 2002

---
Scientists believe the hunger-inducing effects of cannabis can be used to
tackle obesity.
Smoking cannabis often triggers an urge to eat - what smokers sometimes
refer to as "the munchies".

But researchers at French pharmaceutical company Sanofi-Synthelabo believe
this chemical effect can be manipulated to curb hunger.

They are currently testing a drug which uses the scientific knowledge about
cannabis to suppress appetite.

Early results from clinical trials on the experimental drug Rimonabant in
the United States and Europe have been promising.

Patients taking the drug lost up to four kilos over a 16 week period.

Early theory

Doctors originally thought that cannabis affected the brain in a fairly
random manner and that one of those random effects was hunger.

However, studies in the late 1980s showed that cannabis has a direct impact
on appetite.

It triggers a surge in the brain's own cannabis-like chemicals.

These chemicals, called cannabinoids, play a role in regulating appetite.

Scientists at Sanofi-Synthelabo then discovered a way of blocking off
receptors in the brain to stop these cannabinoids from sending "hungry"
messages.

They have since developed a drug to perform this function. Successful
results in animals have led to trials in humans.

The company is now half way through a phase III clinical trial involving
more than 6,000 patients.

Human trials

This includes one study in the US where 2,800 patients comparing the
performance of Rimonabant with a dummy pill to see if it helps to reduce
weight and prevent weight gain.

A similar trial involving 1,400 patients in Europe is also underway. Both
studies are due to end in August 2003.

Dr Lewis Aronne, director of the comprehensive weight control programme at
the Weill Cornell Medical Center in New York, said early results were
promising. His clinic is one of those involved in the trials.

He said weight loss among patients was "in the same ballpark as medicines
we've seen before".

However, he added more research was needed to determine the long-term
effects of the drug.

If the clinical trials are successful, the pharmaceutical company could
seek approval for the new drug in 2004.

 

 

 

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!