Health & Medical Alternative Medicine

Prepare Your Old Hookah: Cannabinoids to Address Radiating Pain

Neuropathic pain is recognized as numbness, burning, tingling sensations, lancination, itching and crawling sensations. Symptoms may be focal or radiating along either side of the body. Neuropathic pain can be a result of infection, trauma or disease of nerves in the extremities or the central nervous system. Approximately 200 million people regularly experience neuropathic pain worldwide.

Traditional western medicine is of variable effectiveness, usually prescribed as a combination of anti-inflammatory agents, opiates, anticonvulsants or antidepressants. These medicinal agents are all associated with side effects and in combination frequently cause moderate gastrointestinal distress, diminished mental acuity and alteration of motor skills, tolerance and dependence.

Cannabis has been known to be a very good analgesic for neuropathic pain since the late 1800's. Medicals scientists have identified chemical receptors in body with which cannabanoid compounds interact. These receptors, distinct from opiate receptors, account for the increased analgesia with cannabis in persons already using other prescription analgesics. Notably, our body also creates its own endocannabinoids (some similar to endorphins) that interact with these cannabanoid receptor sites. The existence of the endocannabinoids and receptors offer a conceptual framework to explain the effectiveness of various marijuana strains with differing chemical constituent concentrations.

In Great Britain, Sativex®, a cannabis based product, has been approved for the neuropathic pain occurring in Multiple Sclerosis. In the U.S., Cesamet®  (nabilone) and Marinol®  (dronabinol) are synthetic THC available for appetite enhancement in cases of end-stage AIDS and for post-chemotherapy patients. However, as pain medications that exhibit limited effectiveness compared to the full chemical spectrum of cannabinoids in natural plant sources. Additionally, Cesamet®  and Marinol® prescription in pain care is considered an "off-label" use, thereby not covered by insurers or associated with very expensive co-payments.

Given the inconsistent and sometimes marked ineffectiveness of combinations of NSAIDs, opiates, anticonvulsants and antidepressants in pain management, most western physicians should be exhilarated about cannabis, a natural plant product. However, most clinicians defend the problems of opiate abuse and diversion as well as nominalize the relevance of adverse effects of all of these products via their traditional biases.

Contact us for additional information regarding pain management and cannabis.

Related posts "Health & Medical : Alternative Medicine"

Why Plants Are Still So Vital To Our Health

Alternative Medicine

Alternative Medicine - Suggestions

Alternative Medicine

Prepare Your Old Hookah: Cannabinoids to Address Radiating Pain

Alternative Medicine

Natural Detox and Healthy Colon Cleanse as Best Body Cleanser

Alternative Medicine

Botox- How Long Will It Last and How Often Will I Need Treatment?

Alternative Medicine

What You Should Know About Weed Tea

Alternative Medicine

How to Stop Sweating - Can You Really Banish Excessive Sweating?

Alternative Medicine

Sore Throat Symptoms and Home Remedies

Alternative Medicine

Complementary and Alternative Treatments for Cirrhosis

Alternative Medicine

Leave a Comment