It's generally believed to have *some* effect in reducing intraocular pressure from glaucoma. It is also believed to relieve nausea and other side effects from chemotherapy and AIDS medicines. Some people claim it's a better and less hazardous pain relief medication than opiates.
Most people just use it to get high, though.
2006-12-21 10:55:59
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answer #1
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answered by loon_mallet_wielder 5
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Yes I do believe that it can be used for medical treatments. It helped my aunt to eat and maintain her wait while she was fighting cancer. Even though she eventually lost the battle it did help her for awhile.
2006-12-21 20:29:51
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answer #2
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answered by ♥just me♥ 5
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The debate over the use of marijuana for medical purposes has been ongoing for years. In June 2005, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against medical use of marijuana, but emphasized the decision was not over whether marijuana is effective for pain relief.
Whether marijuana will relieve your side effects or symptoms is questionable. But the risks of smoking pot are clear. Examine the facts about marijuana before making your decision.
People have used marijuana as a medical treatment for thousands of years. Such uses extend even to modern America. Marijuana was listed by the U.S. Pharmacopeia, the organization that sets quality standards for approved drugs in the United States, until the 1940s, when political pressure against marijuana's recreational use triggered its removal.
Despite the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling that state laws allowing medicinal use of marijuana must bow to federal law banning it, proponents still tout this controversial plant's ability to treat pain, nausea and other uncomfortable side effects of medical treatment as well as some disease symptoms.
Possible medical uses
Scientists studying marijuana's potential medical uses have found that it may help treat a variety of conditions.
Nausea
One of THC's medical uses best supported by research is the treatment of nausea. It can improve mild to moderate nausea caused by cancer chemotherapy and help reduce nausea and weight loss in people with AIDS.
Younger people may find marijuana more useful as a treatment for nausea than do older people — who may not tolerate its mind-altering side effects as well. The prescription form, dronabinol, also may produce psychological side effects that make it inappropriate for some older people. Doctors generally prescribe several kinds of newer anti-nausea drugs with fewer side effects before resorting to dronabinol.
Glaucoma
This disease — the third-leading cause of blindness in the United States — is marked by increased pressure in the eyeball, which can lead to vision loss.
In the early 1970s, scientists discovered that smoking marijuana reduced pressure in the eyes. Exactly how the cannabinoids in marijuana produce this effect isn't known. Scientists have discovered CB1 receptors in the eyes, which may provide clues for future research on how marijuana affects glaucoma.
Your doctor can prescribe other medications to treat glaucoma, but these can lose their effectiveness over time. Researchers are working to develop medications containing cannabinoids that can be put directly on the eyes — to avoid the mind-altering side effects and other health consequences of smoking the plant.
Pain
People widely used marijuana for pain relief in the 1800s, and several studies have found that cannabinoids have analgesic effects. In fact, THC may work as well in treating cancer pain as codeine, a mild pain reliever. Cannabinoids also appear to enhance the effects of opiate pain medications to provide pain relief at lower dosages.
Researchers currently are developing new medications based on cannabis to treat pain.
Multiple sclerosis
Research results on the effectiveness of cannabinoids in the treatment of the tremors, muscle spasms and pain of multiple sclerosis (MS) — a disease of the nervous system that can cause muscle pain — are mixed. A 2003 study found that cannabinoids significantly reduced pain in people with multiple sclerosis.
Some scientists feel that more research may show cannabinoids useful in treating MS. Marijuana may protect nerves from the kind of damage that occurs during the disease. They also suggest that animal study results, knowledge of CB1 receptors in the brain and users' reports of decreased symptoms after using marijuana support this possibility. However, others advise caution in using marijuana to treat MS, given the modest therapeutic effects cannabinoids have demonstrated so far and the potential of long-term adverse side effects.
So it is a YES...
2006-12-21 18:57:46
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answer #3
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answered by Chez 4
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Yes.
2006-12-21 18:57:20
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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It does ease the pressure in the optic nerve
2006-12-21 18:55:03
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Sure it makes you crave food. So anyone who is unable to eat, because of maybe Chemo-therapy, it would help. However, I am not into it.
2006-12-21 18:55:37
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answer #6
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answered by Jinny E 5
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absolutely,only nobody will ever belive it long enough to pass through the FDA.
2006-12-21 18:55:45
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answer #7
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answered by nobodytotalkabout 4
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yes...
2006-12-21 18:54:07
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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