Friday, September 21, 2012

Pot compound seen as tool against cancer

Pot compound seen as tool against cancer

Published in the San Francisco Chronicle Sept. 18, 2012

Marijuana, already shown to reduce pain and nausea in cancer patients, may be promising as a cancer-fighting agent against some of the most aggressive forms of the disease.
A growing body of early research shows a compound found in marijuana - one that does not produce the plant's psychotropic high - seems to have the ability to "turn off" the activity of a gene responsible for metastasis in breast and other types of cancers.
Two scientists at San Francisco's California Pacific Medical Center Research Institute first released data five years ago that showed how this compound - called cannabidiol - reduced the aggressiveness of human breast cancer cells in the lab.
Last year, they published a small study that showed it had a similar effect on mice. Now, the researchers are on the cusp of releasing data, also on animals, that expands upon these results, and hope to move forward as soon as possible with human clinical trials.

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Vaporization

An alternative to smoking medical marijuana is to vaporize it. This heats the herb to the point where the chemical properties are released in a vapor, then inhaled. The negative effects from smoke are reduced or eliminated. There is great research on this subject.

From the Ca Norml website;  http://www.canorml.org/health/vaporizers

Vaporization is a technique for avoiding irritating respiratory toxins in marijuana smoke by heating cannabis to a temperature where the psychoactive ingredients evaporate without causing combustion.
Laboratory studies by California NORML and MAPS have found that vaporizers can efficiently deliver cannabinoids while eliminating or drastically reducing other smoke toxins.
Like tobacco, marijuana smoke contains toxins that are known to be hazardous to the respiratory system. Among them are the highly carcinogenic polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons, a prime suspect in cigarette-related cancers. These toxins are essentially a byproduct of combustion, separate from the pharmaceutically active components of marijuana, known as cannabinoids, which include THC. Although there is no proof that marijuana smoking causes cancer, chronic pot smokers have been shown to suffer an elevated risk of bronchitis and respiratory infections. Respiratory disease due to smoking may therefore rightly be regarded as the primary physiological hazard of marijuana.
Cannabis vaporizers are designed to let users inhale active cannabinoids while avoiding harmful smoke toxins. They do so by heating cannabis to a temperature of 180 - 200° C (356° - 392° F), just below the point of combustion where smoke is produced. At this point, THC and other medically active cannabinoids are emitted with little or none of the carcinogenic tars and noxious gases found in smoke. Many medical marijuana patients who find smoked marijuana highly irritating report effective relief inhaling through vaporizers. Users who are concerned about the respiratory hazards of smoking are strongly advised to use vaporizers. Alternative devices, such as waterpipes, have been shown to be ineffective at reducing the tars in marijuana smoke (Report).

Other Reports

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaporizer_%28cannabis%29
http://www.cannabisculture.com/articles/4948.html
http://www.maps.org/research/mmj/


 Commercial sites for shopping Vaporizers;

http://marijuanavaporizer.com/
http://www.atmosrx.com/all-vaporizers.html
http://thebestvaporizer.blogspot.com/2009/04/best-vaporizer-temperature-for.html
http://www.420vaporizers.com/

As always, we are happy to learn from our readers. If you know of any topic, website or educational material to assist our medical marijuana patients, please post.

The Medimar Staff