Cannibis may prevent cancer

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
63
RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
[SIZE=+1]Study: Smoking Pot Doesn't Cause Cancer--It May Prevent It! [/SIZE]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif][SIZE=+2]The Greatest Story Never Told [/SIZE][/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif][SIZE=+1]By FRED GARDNER [/SIZE][/FONT]​
[SIZE=-1]Smoking Cannabis Does Not Cause Cancer
Of Lung or Upper Airways, Tashkin Finds;
Data Suggest Possible Protective Effect
[/SIZE]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][SIZE=+3]T[/SIZE][/FONT][FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][SIZE=-1]he story summarized by that headline ran in O'Shaughnessy's (Autumn 2005), CounterPunch, and the Anderson Valley Advertiser. Did we win Pulitzers, dude? No, the story was ignored or buried by the corporate media. It didn't even make the "Project Censored" list of under-reported stories for 2005. "We were even censored by Project Censored," said Tod Mikuriya, who liked his shot of wry. [/SIZE][/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][SIZE=-1]It's not that the subject i[/SIZE][/FONT]http://www.counterpunch.org/gardner05032008.html
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
63
RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
Yes but the side effects are terrible, the ravenous munchies and the different dimension claim hundreds of thousands of victims every year who are never heard of again, marijahuna is still a killer you can bet on that buddy, we have scientific proof from scientists.
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
63
RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
I heard that if you keep your farts in, they climb up your spine and you get crappy ideas from that. Let go!!!

Hello Fred, it's been a long time since we had a full time fart expert here at Contented Canadian.
The demand for expertise in the anal sciences ensure a high turnover in the field. I urge you to apply for the position, send your resume via PM to Jim Moyer of this forum, he's our in house technicle expert on poop and gastric emmisions.:lol:
 

Stretch

House Member
Feb 16, 2003
3,924
19
38
Australia
CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts: A new study in the journal Neurology is being hailed as unassailable proof that marijuana is a valuable medicine. It is a sad commentary on the state of modern medicine that we still need "proof" of something that medicine has known for 5,000 years.
The study, from the University of California at San Francisco, found that smoked marijuana was effective at relieving the extreme pain of a debilitating condition known as peripheral neuropathy.
It was a study of HIV patients, but a similar type of pain caused by damage to nerves afflicts people with many other illnesses including diabetes and multiple sclerosis.
Neuropathic pain is notoriously resistant to treatment with conventional pain drugs. Even powerful and addictive narcotics like morphine and OxyContin often provide little relief. This study leaves no doubt that marijuana can safely ease this type of pain.
As all marijuana research in the United States must be, the new study was conducted with government-supplied marijuana of notoriously poor quality. So it probably underestimated the potential benefit.
This is all good news, but it should not be news at all. In the 40-odd years I have been studying the medicinal uses of marijuana, I have learned that the recorded history of this medicine goes back to ancient times.
In the 19th century it became a well-established Western medicine whose versatility and safety were unquestioned. From 1840 to 1900, American and European medical journals published over 100 papers on the therapeutic uses of marijuana, also known as cannabis.
Our knowledge has advanced greatly over the years. Scientists have identified over 60 unique constituents in marijuana, called cannabinoids, and we have learned much about how they work. We have also learned that our own bodies produce similar chemicals, called endocannabinoids.
The mountain of accumulated anecdotal evidence that pointed the way to the present and other clinical studies also strongly suggests there are a number of other devastating disorders and symptoms for which marijuana has been used for centuries.
They deserve the same careful, methodologically sound research.
While few such studies have so far been completed, all have lent weight to what medicine already knew but had largely forgotten or ignored: Marijuana is effective at relieving nausea and vomiting, spasticity, appetite loss, certain types of pain and other debilitating symptoms. And it is extraordinarily safe — safer than most medicines prescribed every day.
If marijuana were a new discovery rather than a well-known substance carrying cultural and political baggage, it would be hailed as a wonder drug.
The pharmaceutical industry is scrambling to isolate cannabinoids and synthesize analogs and to package them in non-smokable forms. In time, companies will almost certainly come up with products and delivery systems that are more useful and less expensive than herbal marijuana.
However, the analogs they have produced so far are more expensive than herbal marijuana, and none has shown any improvement over the plant nature gave us to take orally or to smoke.
We live in an antismoking environment. But as a method of delivering certain medicinal compounds, smoking marijuana has some real advantages: The effect is almost instantaneous, allowing the patient to fine-tune his or her dose to get the needed relief without intoxication.
Smoked marijuana has never been demonstrated to have serious pulmonary consequences, but in any case the technology to inhale these cannabinoids without smoking marijuana already exists as vaporizers that allow for smoke-free inhalation.
Hopefully the UCSF study will add to the pressure on the U.S. government to rethink its irrational ban on the medicinal use of marijuana — and its destructive attacks on patients and caregivers in states that have chosen to allow such use.
Rather than admit they have been mistaken all these years, federal officials can cite "important new data" and start revamping outdated and destructive policies.
Such legislation would bring much-needed relief to millions suffering from cancer, AIDS, multiple sclerosis, arthritis and other debilitating illnesses.
Lester Grinspoon, an emeritus professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, is the coauthor of "Marijuana, the Forbidden Medicine." This article first appeared in The Boston Globe.
http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/03/...dgrinspoon.php
 

Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
34,884
125
63
Canadian Centre for Policy Studies

What we now know about marijuana

by Margret Kopala
31 May, 2008
Leading the recent National Post debate on cannabis, columnist Barbara Kay can't have anticipated Vancouver's safe injection site, rather than legalized cannabis, would be the Trojan Horse for the legalization of all addictive drugs.
This week, the right of addicts to continue use of illicit drugs was upheld by the B.C. Supreme Court even though no treatment of which I am aware uses the substance that caused the problem to cure it. Smokers use nicotine gum, not more cigarettes, to kick the habit, don't steal to feed their habit and if heroine and cocaine are so helpful, why aren't doctors prescribing them in pill form?
At least we know something about cannabis. In fact we know a lot. And now a paper published in Nature places the medicinal, the harmful and the recreational aspects of cannabis in a perspective that has implications for how we treat all addictive substances.
According to The Independent, research in the United Kingdom of an estimated 500,000 cannabis addicts shows some 26,000 sought treatment in 2006. Findings from Europe's largest psychiatric research facility, London University's Institute of Psychiatry, establish a clear connection between cannabis use and psychosis. Though no user is immune, vulnerable adolescents are at particular risk for developing schizophrenia, a progressively disabling form of psychosis producing hallucinations, delusions and bizarre behaviour, in young adulthood.
Research from the institute using MRI scans has demonstrated how two active ingredients in cannabis affect the brain. The first, called cannabidiol (CBD), relaxes it while the other creates temporary hallucinations and feelings of paranoia. Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), we now know, switches off a regulator in the inferior frontal cortex by disrupting neuronal signalling.
"Cannabis, the mind and society: the hash realities" synthesizes these and other findings. Lead author and the Institute's authority on marijuana and psychosis, Robin M. Murray, confirmed to me by e-mail that it remains the most current on the subject.
It is also the most important. Not only does it provide much-needed perspective, it also demonstrates how, irrespective of the number of individual peer reviewed studies, each with inherent limitations, no full understanding of a subject is possible without the contextualization that meta-analyses and overviews provide. Health Canada's advisory committee on Insite, for instance, showed how such limitations produced a lukewarm endorsement.
If brain function is affected by CBD and THC, "Hash Realities" considers how causality is further suggested by the fact psychotic symptoms worsen with continued use and how while family history is a factor, so are the associated genes, and a quarter of the population has them. And while cannabis is addictive and its use commonly precedes the use of hard drugs, the "gateway" theory, formerly discredited, is now being scientifically verified.
The paper also references the past and exposes the confusions of the present. "The classical Greek term pharmakon indicates that a substance can be a remedy as well as a poison," it says. Cannabis based medicines have a future but, in a "rational world," these would not be influenced by attitudes toward recreational use where real problems do exist. Most problematic? Four per cent of the global population uses cannabis; world production has doubled since the early 1990s and THC concentrations have escalated. The number of children using the drug is rising. By 2010, one study predicts, "a substantial increase in the incidence of schizophrenia should be apparent." Legalized cannabis presented few problems in the Netherlands where it is being reconsidered, but highly restrictive Sweden presented fewer problems still.
In Canada, this picture is complicated by the fact marijuana use is the highest in the industrial world. The trade, worth $6 billion in British Columbia alone, finances the import of guns and hard drugs, whose victims land in Canada's urban centres where health communities then seek desperate solutions.
"Hash Realities" concludes that public education is more effective than legislation but given the evidence, the British government recently made cannabis possession punishable by up to five years in prison.
Now where are the comparable perspectives on heroine and cocaine use?
Margret Kopala is Director of Research and Policy Development at the Canadian Centre for Policy Studies. You can contact Margret Kopala by sending an email to mkopala@policystudies.ca This column was first published in the Ottawa Citizen
 

Praxius

Mass'Debater
Dec 18, 2007
10,677
161
63
Halifax, NS & Melbourne, VIC
Some strains of cannibis eliminate my arthritis pain completely and in less than ten minutes, whereas Oxycontin does nothing but make me sleepy.

I know Oxycontin and Dilaudid have become a scourge here in the Maritimes, esspecially in Cape Breton and the Annapolis Valley, since many labour workers who reported pains to their doctors, all the doctors ever did until they got cracked down on, was just Px's them to everybody that came into their offices..... now there's a huge addiction problem in those areas and they're being sold on the streets, and some of these people who no longer need them and broke the addiction have been selling their Px's to other people for a cheap high..... however it's been reported that those two drugs can be almost as addictive as cocaine, and the withdrawls are quite horrible for many.

I know marijuana removes the arthritis within my left hand nuckles from years of drawing and also eased my carpal tunnel to the point where it's as though it doesn't exist..... although after about a month of no marijuana, it does start to come back, but it's not like some numbing effect that it has, AKA: masking the pain, it just helps blood flow to the areas, and releases the tension in those areas.

And I also heard that report a few years back that Marijuana can help prevent some forms of Cancer.... I imagine so long as you don't smoke it in joints with mixed tobacco in it.....

^ and that's also something that has skewed the debate on how dangerous Marijuana is. I imagine many might have heard that a joint has more tar and crap compared to ciggs (something like 6 times the ammount) and therefore marijuana is more harmful for you then cigarettes.... when in truth, the majority of joints on average are made with a mix of both marijuana and tobacco in order to save on your stash..... and it's the tobacco within that joint that increases this amount. Not to mention that most joints either have no filter in them, or a small filter made out of rolled up cardboard for something to hold onto.... therefore you're inhaling that tobacco you would normally inhale with a normal filter, along-side the marijuana, and thus, skews the final results of a joint's actual health.
 

jimmoyer

jimmoyer
Apr 3, 2005
5,101
22
38
69
Winchester Virginia
www.contactcorp.net
Hello Fred, it's been a long time since we had a full time fart expert here at Contented Canadian.
The demand for expertise in the anal sciences ensure a high turnover in the field. I urge you to apply for the position, send your resume via PM to Jim Moyer of this forum, he's our in house technicle expert on poop and gastric emmisions.:lol:
----------------------------------------Darkbeaver------------------------------------------------------------

My automatic scanner has alerted me to all flatulence references.
I'm here for you.


Please write all inquiries to:
Center for the Science of Sphincter Control Adaptability
Pee Oh Box No.2
Allfarta, VA 22601
USA
 

Stretch

House Member
Feb 16, 2003
3,924
19
38
Australia
What Your Government Knows About Cannabis And Cancer -- And Isn't Telling You
Senator Ted Kennedy is putting forward a brave face following his recent surgery but the sad reality remains. Even with successful surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy treatment, gliomas -- a highly aggressive form of brain cancer that strikes approximately 10,000 Americans annually -- tragically claim the lives of 75 percent of its victims within two years and virtually all within five years.
But what if there was an alternative treatment for gliomas that could selectively target the cancer while leaving healthy cells intact? And what if federal bureaucrats were aware of this treatment, but deliberately withheld this information from the public? Sadly, the questions posed above are not entirely hypothetical.

Posted Jun 24, 2008 05:11 PM PST
Category:
SCIENCE/HEALTH
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/paul-armentano/what-your-government-know_b_108712.html
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
63
RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
Hello Fred, it's been a long time since we had a full time fart expert here at Contented Canadian.
The demand for expertise in the anal sciences ensure a high turnover in the field. I urge you to apply for the position, send your resume via PM to Jim Moyer of this forum, he's our in house technicle expert on poop and gastric emmisions.:lol:
----------------------------------------Darkbeaver------------------------------------------------------------

My automatic scanner has alerted me to all flatulence references.
I'm here for you.


Please write all inquiries to:
Center for the Science of Sphincter Control Adaptability
Pee Oh Box No.2
Allfarta, VA 22601
USA

I guess Fred wasn't a serious candidate Jim. That's a problem with todays youth, they take thier natural emmisions very lightly. I assume your center will provide a reciept for tax purpose, I have reason to believe that I will be making a large donation in the near future. Also I will be sending you a stoole sample for clinical evaluation. Your humanitarian work in this field is under appreciated. thankyou
 

Unforgiven

Force majeure
May 28, 2007
6,770
137
63
Too many studies resulting in too many suggestions.

When do we get to see some hardcore research with the unedited results released to the public so that those who can understand the reports can make their own determinations of what Pot does and doesn't do?
 

lone wolf

Grossly Underrated
Nov 25, 2006
32,493
210
63
In the bush near Sudbury
Too many studies resulting in too many suggestions.

When do we get to see some hardcore research with the unedited results released to the public so that those who can understand the reports can make their own determinations of what Pot does and doesn't do?

To hell with all the research. It was here and in use long before the phamaceuticals. The best ones to determine if it works is the people who use it (Note: I DID NOT say abuse it)
 

Unforgiven

Force majeure
May 28, 2007
6,770
137
63
To hell with all the research. It was here and in use long before the phamaceuticals. The best ones to determine if it works is the people who use it (Note: I DID NOT say abuse it)

I get what you mean here but I disagree on the technicalities.
 

Stretch

House Member
Feb 16, 2003
3,924
19
38
Australia
Big Pharma Is in a Frenzy to Bring Cannabis-Based Medicines to Market
Big Pharma is busily applying for -- and has already received -- multiple patents for the medical properties of pot. These include patents for synthetic pot derivatives (such as the oral THC pill Marinol), cannabinoid agonists (synthetic agents that bind to the brain's endocannabinoid receptors) like HU-210 and cannabis antagonists such as Rimonabant. This trend was most recently summarized in the NIH paper (pdf), "The endocannabinoid system as an emerging target of pharmacotherapy," which concluded, "The growing interest in the underlying science has been matched by a growth in the number of cannabinoid drugs in pharmaceutical development from two in 1995 to 27 in 2004." In other words, at the same time the American Medical Association is proclaiming that pot has no medical value, Big Pharma is in a frenzy to bring dozens of new, cannabis-based medicines to market.
Posted Jul 5, 2008 08:33 PM PST
Category:
SCIENCE/HEALTH
http://www.alternet.org/drugreporter/90469/
 

lone wolf

Grossly Underrated
Nov 25, 2006
32,493
210
63
In the bush near Sudbury
Big Pharma Is in a Frenzy to Bring Cannabis-Based Medicines to Market
Big Pharma is busily applying for -- and has already received -- multiple patents for the medical properties of pot. These include patents for synthetic pot derivatives (such as the oral THC pill Marinol), cannabinoid agonists (synthetic agents that bind to the brain's endocannabinoid receptors) like HU-210 and cannabis antagonists such as Rimonabant. This trend was most recently summarized in the NIH paper (pdf), "The endocannabinoid system as an emerging target of pharmacotherapy," which concluded, "The growing interest in the underlying science has been matched by a growth in the number of cannabinoid drugs in pharmaceutical development from two in 1995 to 27 in 2004." In other words, at the same time the American Medical Association is proclaiming that pot has no medical value, Big Pharma is in a frenzy to bring dozens of new, cannabis-based medicines to market.
Posted Jul 5, 2008 08:33 PM PST
Category: SCIENCE/HEALTH
http://www.alternet.org/drugreporter/90469/

Ha! I'd love to see Big Pharma take on Mother Nature in court for patent infringement....

Woof!