Low Doses of THC (Cannabis) Can Halt Brain Damage, Study Suggests

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Low Doses of THC (Cannabis) Can Halt Brain Damage, Study Suggests

May 30, 2013 — Though marijuana is a well-known recreational drug, extensive scientific research has been conducted on the therapeutic properties of marijuana in the last decade. Medical cannabis is often used by sufferers of chronic ailments, including cancer and post-traumatic stress disorder, to combat pain, insomnia, lack of appetite, and other symptoms.

Now Prof. Yosef Sarne of Tel Aviv University's Adelson Center for the Biology of Addictive Diseases at the Sackler Faculty of Medicine says that the drug has neuroprotective qualities as well. He has found that extremely low doses of THC -- the psychoactive component of marijuana -- protects the brain from long-term cognitive damage in the wake of injury from hypoxia (lack of oxygen), seizures, or toxic drugs. Brain damage can have consequences ranging from mild cognitive deficits to severe neurological damage.

Previous studies focused on injecting high doses of THC within a very short time frame -- approximately 30 minutes -- before or after injury. Prof. Sarne's current research, published in the journals Behavioural Brain Research and Experimental Brain Research, demonstrates that even extremely low doses of THC -- around 1,000 to 10,000 times less than that in a conventional marijuana cigarette -- administered over a wide window of 1 to 7 days before or 1 to 3 days after injury can jumpstart biochemical processes which protect brain cells and preserve cognitive function over time.

This treatment, especially in light of the long time frame for administration and the low dosage, could be applicable to many cases of brain injury and be safer over time, Prof. Sarne says.

Conditioning the brain

While performing experiments on the biology of cannabis, Prof. Sarne and his fellow researchers discovered that low doses of the drug had a big impact on cell signalling, preventing cell death and promoting growth factors. This finding led to a series of experiments designed to test the neuroprotective ability of THC in response to various brain injuries.

In the lab, the researchers injected mice with a single low dose of THC either before or after exposing them to brain trauma. A control group of mice sustained brain injury but did not receive the THC treatment. When the mice were examined 3 to 7 weeks after initial injury, recipients of the THC treatment performed better in behavioral tests measuring learning and memory. Additionally, biochemical studies showed heightened amounts of neuroprotective chemicals in the treatment group compared to the control group.

The use of THC can prevent long-term cognitive damage that results from brain injury, the researchers conclude. One explanation for this effect is pre- and post-conditioning, whereby the drug causes minute damage to the brain to build resistance and trigger protective measures in the face of much more severe injury, explains Prof. Sarne. The low dosage of THC is crucial to initiating this process without causing too much initial damage.

cont. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/05/130530132531.htm
 
Seems strange it is so illegal still in most of the world. Hopefully things will change eventually. One day. Maybe.
 
^Things are already changing! Very rapidly, too, I would say.
Alcohol is the bad guy in a good disguise (legality).
Cannabis is the good guy in a bad disguise (anti-cannabis propaganda).
But people are learning the truth, and as the truth is better-known, things will change.
 
I mean, there are also studies concluding that its neurotoxic. General consensus (sek or someone of like status)?
 
^ Thanks. I am not a neuroscientist, but I can make the following observations:

It is old research, especially by neuroscience standards (1998 was a neuroscience lifetime ago).
And the THC was applied to slices of rat brain, which is not always the same thing as applying it to a human brain that is still functioning in a system.
Also, they used THC without CBDs, which may make a difference.

Hoping that there is no more research to back that up, and that THC is not neurotoxic!
 
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^ Ho-Chi-Minh is a voice that brings balance here, where people tend to be too pro-drugs, even in the face of scientific evidence that suggests something negative about their favorite drug.
He may have a beef with cannabis, but I find his input to be useful.

I concur, I have been trolled by him/her a few times though and have noticed he always has something negative to say about cannabis.

i.e. I once claimed that the reason so many kids are diagnosed with ADHD in the US is because of the way the healthcare system in the US is setup for profit, which is absolutely true. It's the reason so many "doctors" come from Asia, especially India. If I had a nickel for every Indian psychiatrist in the US I'd have at least half a million dollars. He demanded I specify a study that concludes this although it was flagrant trolling because he can just look up doctors himself and see how many Indian names pop up in a psychiatrist search.

Do I really need to provide sources the American healthcare system is nastily lucrative for doctors, especially "psychiatrists" who have vested interest in medicating kids with schedule II narcotics so they have to come back every month, half of the kids are on medicaid and I'm sure many of them have parents that sell the meds on the street! Do I really need sources to prove 2+2=4? lol ;) Obviously where there's money to be made, there's people going to chase the almighty $USD$

Ho-Chi-Minh does provide a good view point. I'm not necessarily dissing it, just noting he/she does seem to always have something negative to say about marijuana.

Now, MY OPINION - Marijuana is pretty damn addictive substance IMO. I'm not quite sure if it's because of additives added by cartels that got me hooked, (like tobacco companies do, but I can honestly say weed has been one of the most addictive drugs I've ever done. The psychological addiction was on par with hydrocodone 10/325's (aka Norco) for me. The withdrawals I got after ceasing use of daily cannabis were horrible. I can honestly say I was hooked the first time I smoked Mexican buds at age 12. I wanted to be high and stay high 24/7.

Weed was what got me into harder drugs, but IMO that's because once I realized I was lied to about weed I concluded perhaps I was lied to about other drugs.

Not to mention I found out my Adderall prescription was a mixture of amphetamine salts, how my "ADD medication" was prescription-only, had to see a Psychiatrist monthly for it, and it was completely 100% legal AND socially acceptable for little kids to take it. My Indian psychiatrist actually started me on Adderall XR when I had health insurance and when it was still patented by Shire so it costed like $200 a month but the co-pay was like $20 or something. Why not ritalin or concerta i.e. methylphenidate? To this day I've never even tried methylphenidate. Nope, only the highly addictive and sought after Adderall. I used to take 40 mg's a day in high school. A 30 XR cap and a blue 10 IR generic at lunch time for the mid-day crash.

Then I got switched to an Iranian psychiatrist who insisted I try Vyvanse after I told him I didn't like the side effects of Adderall. It was only $275/month(+$150/month for the doctor visit), but hey you only live once (lol...). Well it worked well, real smooth extended release straight dopamine-releasing dextroamphetamine instead of the racemic BS adderall. But it was also patented by New River Pharma, who is now owned by Shire :D I told that doctor I couldn't afford Vyvanse but he didn't care, he thought I was too addicted to it to stop, but I did. The withdrawals were hell. Kind of like the opposite of weed withdrawals ironically.

It's funny because I really started smoking weed daily to deal with adderall comedowns during adolescence. The withdrawls offset amphetamine withdrawals perfectly. Weed withdrawals consist of (for me) insomnia, loss of appetite, restlessness/irratibility etc. Amphetamine withdrawals are increased appetite, chronic fatigue in addition to constipation.

When I stopped smoking weed I had trouble sleeping more than 4 hours a night for a whole week! WTF? sleep at 12AM, up at 4, for a whole week! So I'm not arguing weed has no side effects. I'm just saying it clearly has medicinal value, despite the criticism. Especially when treating psychological disorders such as: depression, bipolar, anorexia and more. It certainly helped me eat on adderall.
 
he/she has had bad experiences with cannabis from the past I believe (if I recall right, from some threads on here)
 
There was actually another study released this week saying that THC may help with stopping HIV from entering the brain. Which could be very useful because most medications either don't function and aren't very effective with brain cells. THC the miracle drug.
 
You clearly aren't in your right mind. I've seen your blog posts.


I've also had some of the best times of my life on weed.

98 isn't that far off, besides, the conjecture is statistically rigorous, unless you see a flaw in the study which probably wouldn't be present nowadays.

I still smoke. Its not good for me.
 
You clearly aren't in your right mind. I've seen your blog posts.


I've also had some of the best times of my life on weed.

98 isn't that far off, besides, the conjecture is statistically rigorous, unless you see a flaw in the study which probably wouldn't be present nowadays.

I still smoke. Its not good for me.

Yeah, I got laid off from work, evicted from my apartment, no $ for weed or anything really, lost my fiancee/partner/roommate of 5 years. Oh yeah, and my dog... You wouldn't be depressed? BTW I landed a really good full-time job last week and I absolutely love it! Thanks for commenting on my blog posts, they are irrelevant and I needed a place to vent. So clearly you are not in your right mind, as I've read your posts :p;)
 
There was actually another study released this week saying that THC may help with stopping HIV from entering the brain. Which could be very useful because most medications either don't function and aren't very effective with brain cells. THC the miracle drug.

I didn't even know there were white blood cells in the brain. I thought the blood brain barrier kept them out.
 
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