Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


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

UK: Cannabis May Have Long-Term Benefit for MS

Patricia Reaney

Reuters

Friday 10 Sep 2004

---

EXETER, England (Reuters) - Cannabis-based treatments may have longer-term
benefits for multiple sclerosis patients, scientists said on Friday.

The findings of a short, 15-week trial of MS patients published last year
were inconclusive because although patients reported relief in muscle
stiffness, rigidity and mobility, the findings could not be confirmed by
physiotherapists.

But Dr John Zajicek, of the Peninsula Medical School at the Universities of
Exeter and Plymouth in southwestern England who headed the study, told a
conference there seemed to be further benefits for patients who continued
treatment for a year.

"In the short term-study there was some evidence of cannabinoids
alleviating symptoms of multiple sclerosis; in the longer term there is a
suggestion of a more useful beneficial effect, which was not clear at the
initial stage," he said.

Cannabis contains more than 60 different cannabinoids. The most active is
thought to be tetrahydrocannabinol (THC).

The 667 patients in the original study, which was reported in The Lancet
medical journal, were given a cannabis extract or capsules with a synthetic
version of THC or a placebo for 15 weeks.

About 80 percent of patients opted to continue the treatments for up to a year.

"We have generated interesting results which suggest there may be long-term
benefits," Zajicek told a news conference at the annual meeting of the
British Association for the Advancement of Science.

But he added that more research is needed to confirm the findings, which
will be published later this year.

MS, which affects about one million people worldwide, is a disease in which
immune system cells destroy the myelin sheath that protects the nerve cells
in the brain and spinal cord.

Although cannabinoids have been used in medicine for thousands of years,
until recently there has been little scientific evidence of any therapeutic
values.

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

(c) Reuters 2004. All Rights Reserved.

--=======4C1456B=======--

 

 

 

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!