justagirltm
Greenlighter
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2016
- Messages
- 2
I am in the midst of writing a grant for a double blind clinical study for opiate withdrawal management through cannabis.
I have read that people's experience on here attempted to ease their withdrawal symptoms by combusting (smoking) cannabis. I am proposing that cannabis is to be orally taken in two different forms: flower made edibles and concentrated THC edibles.
Cannabis edibles made from flowers have a low THC concentration and have the synergistic cannabinoids still in tact versus the concentrates which could possibly help with the following symptoms:
vomiting
kicking
pain
diarrhea
Concentrated edibles that have high THC concentrations from anywhere between 60 - 90% of THC could possibly help eliminate the natural fear of withdrawal process due to making the individual extremely high where he or she is undergoing a psychoactive high which can possibly change the mindset of opiate withdrawal.
My purposed posology (dosing) for the process is:
2-gram flower edible upon last opiate use
30 mg THC concentrated edible upon last opiate use
4-gram flower edible(s) after 6 hours of last opiate use (most edibles come in forms of 1 gram or 2 gram treats)
30 mg THC concentrated edible upon last opiate use
2-grams of flower edibles every 2 hours until the 4th day of withdrawal
50 mg THC concentrated edible every 3-5 hours until the 4th day of withdrawal
After the 4th day of withdrawal taper the dose of the 2-gram edible to every 3-6 hours or as needed
After the 4th day of withdrawal taper the dose of the 50 mg THC edible to every 6-8 hours or as needed
If anyone has the desire and means to try this method, please get in touch with me. I cannot support any other proposed medications with this method because other pharmaceuticals may inhibit the desired effects due to the pharmacokinetics.
I also suggest a having CBD oil on hand in order to counteract all negative psychoactive effects in which this method is not suitable for opiate withdrawal if the psychoactive effects aren't desired and positive
The past studies on cannabis support in so far of my proposed thesis.
It is possible in the future to be financially compensated, perhaps 6 months to a year down the road that anyone who has a written journal about their experience of this method as per described above.
Regards,
Just A Girl TM
Without Recourse
Legal Disclaimer: the above written is just my opinions expressed and by no means is meant to replace medical advice from a medical physician
I have read that people's experience on here attempted to ease their withdrawal symptoms by combusting (smoking) cannabis. I am proposing that cannabis is to be orally taken in two different forms: flower made edibles and concentrated THC edibles.
Cannabis edibles made from flowers have a low THC concentration and have the synergistic cannabinoids still in tact versus the concentrates which could possibly help with the following symptoms:
vomiting
kicking
pain
diarrhea
Concentrated edibles that have high THC concentrations from anywhere between 60 - 90% of THC could possibly help eliminate the natural fear of withdrawal process due to making the individual extremely high where he or she is undergoing a psychoactive high which can possibly change the mindset of opiate withdrawal.
My purposed posology (dosing) for the process is:
2-gram flower edible upon last opiate use
30 mg THC concentrated edible upon last opiate use
4-gram flower edible(s) after 6 hours of last opiate use (most edibles come in forms of 1 gram or 2 gram treats)
30 mg THC concentrated edible upon last opiate use
2-grams of flower edibles every 2 hours until the 4th day of withdrawal
50 mg THC concentrated edible every 3-5 hours until the 4th day of withdrawal
After the 4th day of withdrawal taper the dose of the 2-gram edible to every 3-6 hours or as needed
After the 4th day of withdrawal taper the dose of the 50 mg THC edible to every 6-8 hours or as needed
If anyone has the desire and means to try this method, please get in touch with me. I cannot support any other proposed medications with this method because other pharmaceuticals may inhibit the desired effects due to the pharmacokinetics.
I also suggest a having CBD oil on hand in order to counteract all negative psychoactive effects in which this method is not suitable for opiate withdrawal if the psychoactive effects aren't desired and positive
The past studies on cannabis support in so far of my proposed thesis.
It is possible in the future to be financially compensated, perhaps 6 months to a year down the road that anyone who has a written journal about their experience of this method as per described above.
Regards,
Just A Girl TM
Without Recourse
Legal Disclaimer: the above written is just my opinions expressed and by no means is meant to replace medical advice from a medical physician