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Marijuana may benefit epileptics, scientists say

Steve Connor, Science Editor

The Independent

Friday 03 Oct 2003

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Marijuana could help to prevent epilepsy in some patients according to a
study showing that natural cannabis-like substances in the brain can calm
down overactive nerves.

The findings suggest that it may be possible to stimulate the body's own
innate cannabinoids - the ingredients of cannabis - to control epileptic
seizures, when hyperactive brain cells trigger uncontrollable trembling.

Although the research has been done on animals, scientists believe the
discovery could lead to clinical trials in humans to augment the cannabis
trials already under way in Britain to study its pain-relieving properties.

Beat Lutz of the Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry in Munich, a member of
a pan-European team of researchers led by Giovanni Marsicano, said the
study showed that the brain's natural cannabis system was involved in
preventing epileptic seizures.

"When the brain's nerve cells begin to fire too much, then there is a huge
production of innate cannabinoids which calms everything down," Dr Lutz said.

Anecdotal accounts of cannabis being used to control epileptic fits go back
several centuries. Ibn al-Badri, an Arab writer of the 15th century,
described how cannabis was used to cure the epileptic son of a caliphate
council member. In the 19th century, at least one British doctor working in
India used hashish to treat a patient's convulsions, and in the 1970s
medical researchers investigated the anti-epileptic properties of cannabis.

The latest research, published in the journal Science, concentrated on the
role played by the brain's innate cannabis system - protein "receptors" on
the surface of nerve cells that bind with naturally produced cannabinoids.
When the scientists produced genetically engineered mice lacking the
proteins - called CB1 receptors - they found that the animals suffered
excessive epileptic seizures. The researchers were able to identify in
which parts of the brain the CB1 receptors work best to prevent fits by
calming down overactive nerve cells.

But Dr Lutz warned that giving cannabis to epileptic patients to simulate
the body's natural defence against seizures might only work for some people
and could harm others depending on the type of seizure.

"We'd rather suggest that a better strategy would be to develop new drugs
to target your indigenous cannabinoids," Dr Lutz said. "It is a
self-defence system and is only active when it is needed. You don't have it
active all the time so flooding the brain all the time with cannabis may
not be a good thing."

Leslie Iversen, visiting professor of pharmacology at the University of
Oxford and a world authority on cannabis, said the latest research appeared
to explain why the brain produced its own cannabis-like substances.

"It's a very beautifully done piece of work and provides another insight
into the role of the naturally-occurring cannabis system in the brain,"
Professor Iversen said. "The research pinpoints the role of natural
cannabinoids in damping down the hyperstimulation of the brain."

There are about 60 known chemicals in cannabis, the most active of which is
tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). The Medical Research Council has begun cannabis
trials with THC to investigate pain relief in people with multiple
sclerosis and patients recovering from operations.


 

 

 

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