Sunday, December 1, 2019
Marijuana And Medicine Essays - Euphoriants, Entheogens,
  Marijuana And Medicine    I decided upon the question "Should Marijuana be Medicine?" because I wanted  to confirm my strong beliefs of an anti-drug policy, but after research, my  attitude towards medical marijuana changed because it seems the benefits far  out-weigh the risks. Of the 60 some chemicals unique to the marijuana plant, the  main psychoactive ingredient and the one for exploring the physiological as well  as the psychological role in the anandamide system is delta-9  tetrahydrocannabinol, or more commonly known as THC. The anandamide system is  concerned with mood, memory and cognition, perception, movement, coordination,  sleep, thermoregulation, appetite, and immune response (a). Cannabis is the term  used to describe the dried hemp spike. When burned and inhaled, the cannabis  receptors bond to the macrophages in the brain and spine, which control the  anandamide system. Macrophages are chemicals in the body, which attack the  infected areas in the body and help take away the waste from an injury (a). THC  acts as a catalyst in this process. It speeds up the macrophages' disposal of  the waste and is why therapeutic relief comes as such a rapid onset to the user  (b). Even though the THC bonds with the processes going on inside the brain,  there are few THC receptors in the part of the brain that controls the basic  life functions therefore making it impossible for cannabis intoxication to lead  to death (c). There are strong links to cannabis relieving aches and pains,  numbing the symptoms of opiate withdrawal, improving sleep, reducing anxiety,  and alleviating the vomiting, anorexia, and depression associated with certain    AIDS related disorders, specifically AIDS wasting syndrome(c). Some studies have  also shown that cannabis can relieve muscle spasms especially in multiple  sclerosis patients' (b). "With smoked marijuana, patients get immediate  relief, whereas with the oral drug they get a delayed, big rush of  unpleasantness. " Studies on animals have shown it could also quite possibly  be an anticonvulsant. Doctors have been able to make a synthetic delta-9  tetrahydrocannabinol, which they call Nabilone, that helps relieve nausea and  vomiting after chemotherapy and may pose as the strongest evidence that  cannabinoids do work (a). It is a non-psychotropic drug and therefore greater  accepted. Researchers have also developed a delta-8 tetrahydrocannabinol, which  they call dronabinol (a). This oral drug has proven itself in stimulating the  appetite of AIDS patients and has won approval from the American Food and Drug    Association; one of only three drugs approved for this treatment. This drug has  also been found to have analgesic and anti-inflammatory properties along with  possible anxiolytic , hypnotic, and antidepressant properties, which gives this  drug a profile unique to other man made drugs, and is compelling enough for  further studies (a). The adverse effects have also been studied and there have  been no deaths due to cannabis toxicity alone. Some of the most common side  effects include sedation, euphoria, anxiety, and paranoia, dry mouth, blurred  vision, and incoordination. Dependence can occur but withdrawal symptoms are  mild. The smoke is toxic and may increase the risk of cardiovascular and  respiratory disease (a). When I began this study, I was greatly opposed to  marijuana for whatever reason it was being used, but now that I have found more  information on the subject, my opinion has definitely swayed. I have attained a  greater understanding for how this drug interacts with the body and why it has  the effects on pain that it does. I think that if I were to compile more  research, especially now that medical marijuana is actually a respected topic  and no longer a joke, I think that I would find even more reasons as to why this  drug should be seriously considered for therapeutic reasons. One of the reasons  that this drug is so frowned upon is that society has taken for granted and  abused a very unique and possibly beneficial drug therefore almost permanently  attaching a bad name and delaying the necessary research which could be putting  millions to ease. (a) British medical journal Cannabis as a medicine The major  point that this article brought out was that delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol, the  active ingredient in marijuana more commonly known as THC, does ease a wide  variety of various symptoms from aches and pains to AIDS related disorders. They  described how patients told their doctors how effective cannabis is in relieving  aches and pains, numbing the symptoms of opiate withdrawal, improving sleep,  reducing anxiety, and alleviating the vomiting, anorexia, and depression  associated with AIDS related disorders. It also discussed how THC acts as a  catalyst in the anandamide system, which helps dispose of the waste    
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