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Health News

Medical Marijuana Slowly Gains Ground

Clinical Studies Begin to Replace Emotion with Evidence

By Daniel J. DeNoon
WebMD Medical News

August 29, 2003 -- A sea change in science is slowly turning the tide of the medical marijuana debate.

For hundreds of years, marijuana has been used to treat a wide variety of illnesses. But the herb has been illegal throughout the modern era of scientific medical research. Patients swear the drug works to relieve pain, prevent seizures, and counteract the nausea-inducing effects of cancer chemotherapy. But by today's standards, there's no definitive proof that this is so.

Why not? Nearly all U.S.-funded marijuana research has looked for harmful effects from using marijuana as a recreational drug. Meanwhile, there's been little money -- and huge regulatory hurdles -- for studies of marijuana's benefits. That's now changing despite the fact that marijuana remains classed as a Schedule I drug -- a dangerous compound with no medical uses.

Why now? Evidence is beginning to break down the wall of emotion preventing medical marijuana research.

Expert Panels, Breakthrough Findings

It was never clear exactly how marijuana -- which scientists call cannabis -- exerted its euphoria-inducing effects on the brain. Then, in the 1980s, a series of breakthrough studies showed that the body actually makes its own cannabis-like compounds -- cannabinoids.

Why are they there? That question led to the discovery that the body has an entire system based on cannabinoid signals. The signals seem to calm down overexcited nerve cells, says Igor Grant, MD, professor of psychiatry and director of the Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research (CMCR) at the University of California, San Diego.

"It may be the cannabinoid systems -- this is a crude example -- but I think of them as our internal shock absorbers," Grant tells WebMD. "They are circuits that prevent overexcitability, kind of dampers. If that's correct, there are going to be a number of medical applications. For example, I wouldn't be surprised if there were applications for epilepsy and other types of seizures."

Grant isn't the only scientist excited by these possibilities.

In 1997, a National Institutes of Health expert panel concluded that more needs to be known about possible marijuana benefits. In 1999, the Institute of Medicine agreed. It pointed to several areas crying out for clinical marijuana research, notes CMCR co-director Andrew Mattison, PhD.

"There are cannabinoid receptor systems in the brain areas that regulate motion -- and, in retrospect, we know that people with multiple sclerosis and difficulty with spasticity sometimes use medicinal cannabis. That is one of the Institute of Medicine indications for clinical trials," Mattison tells WebMD.

"There is a cannabinoid receptor for pain, another site that modulates appetite -- there's going to be a wealth of basic science research that will hopefully have clinical and practical applications to many different medical indications."

Medical Marijuana Slowly Gains Ground

Clinical Studies Begin to Replace Emotion with Evidence

(continued)

Early Clinical Findings Support More Research

Although funded through 2003 and only at various University of California locations by the California state legislature, the CMCR has, by default, become the national clearinghouse for marijuana research.

The CMCR works closely with state and federal regulators - including the FDA, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and the National Institute on Drug Abuse (the only legal source of marijuana in the U.S.). CMCR provides funds for clinical trials of marijuana. It's won national praise for holding its investigators to the highest scientific standards.

Even before the CMCR was up and running, one stubborn researcher managed to launch a marijuana clinical trial. Donald Abrams, MD, now chief of hematology/oncology at San Francisco General Hospital, is best known for being one of the first doctors to recognize and treat the illness that came to be known as AIDS. AIDS patients have long used marijuana to fight the terrible wasting the disease causes. It's also been said to help an extremely painful condition known as peripheral neuropathy -- a painful nerve disease that has few effective treatments.

Abrams wanted to get federal approval to see whether marijuana really works for this condition. But years of effort proved futile in the face of opposition by federal agencies. Finally, Abrams had a brainstorm. Marijuana affects the immune system. It was just possible that the drug was making patients worse, not better. He submitted a research proposal to look for a harmful effect of marijuana -- and finally won the approval he sought.

The results of that trial appear in the August 19 issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. And they contradict previous studies done in the test tube and with lab animals.

"Much of the published work on marijuana and the immune system is focused on animals and in vitro studies," Abrams tells WebMD. "And, well, if you flood a lot of petri dishes with THC [the active ingredient in marijuana], the immune-cell cultures are going to do poorly.

"In our clinical trial we really didn't see any detriment to the immune system from smoking cannabis. Basically we saw no perturbation of HIV viral load, no detriment to the immune system, and no significant interaction with anti-HIV drugs."

With CMCR funds, Abrams is now doing his peripheral neuropathy study. And he's well on the way to launching a study to see whether adding marijuana to other pain drugs can give relief to dying cancer patients. Overall, the CMCR now has five full-fledged clinical trials under way, which will enroll some 450 patients.

Doctors' Shifting Attitudes on Medical Marijuana

In the last week of July 2003, Medscape -- WebMD's web site for medical professionals -- asked its members what they thought about medical marijuana. It wasn't a scientific poll, although a member's vote is counted only once. Still, the results were surprising. There was a huge response. Three out of four doctors -- and nine out of 10 nurses -- said they favored decriminalization of marijuana for medical uses.

Is it a real trend? Abrams thinks so, but warns that long-held attitudes are slow to change.

"I was pretty much the Lone Ranger of medical marijuana research a few years ago. But not now," he says. "Still, researchers are wary of marijuana research. They feel their reputation may be tainted. And they may be right. For several years I've been invited to do grand rounds at a local hospital in the Bay area. Last year they disinvited me, and I hear it was because of my marijuana research. I've been disinvited from other speaking engagements, too."

"I think these attitudes will change over time -- but it will be slow-going," Mattison says. "Dr. Abrams' comment is typical. People in the medical profession may chuckle at marijuana research and think it is not a bona fide area for scientific investigation. But that will change as the science becomes more clear and more understandable and there are, at some point, some practical applications."

One surprising source of support is moral encouragement from conservative politicians.

"We get a number of stories from elected officials who say, 'Look, I am not for legalization of marijuana. But my sick mother, relative, son, is using it and doing so much better, -- there must be something in it,'" Mattison says.

"A number of people have friends where medical therapies aren't working, and cannabis provided relief from spasticity, pain, nausea, or vomiting. That is turning some opinions and helping people let go of the stereotypical notion that medical marijuana is for potheads."

The CMCR has put aside enough money to complete all its currently approved clinical trials. But the California budget crisis means no more money this year -- at least. Does this mean that clinical research into medical marijuana is over? Grant doesn't think so.

"I think that even if our center runs on hard times, the ball has started rolling," he says. "Clinicians and neuroscientists have an interest in this. There is gong to be more research, and more clinical work, whether we do it or not. Eventually, I foresee NIH [National Institutes of Health] clinical trials. That's my hunch."

A Final Warning

What's changing is the attitude toward investigating possible marijuana benefits. This means more and more doctors are keeping an open mind -- not jumping to the conclusion that the drug will be all things to all people.

"I don't know what the answers will be," Grant says. "The data that are out there suggest there will be some positive applications for marijuana. If I had to bet, I'd say there will be some applications useful for patients in the future."

But, he warns, the opposite could easily be true. The one sure thing about medical research is that it doesn't always provide the answers people expect.

"The caution is that, in the movement toward making marijuana available to patients with no other treatment options, there is the assumption that it is in fact useful. We have to be careful about that," Grant says. "It may be useful for some things, but not useful for others. And if patients take things that are not useful, they may be harming themselves. I urge them to be cautious instead of jumping on the bandwagon and maybe hurting themselves."

Doctors' Shifting Attitudes on Medical Marijuana

In the last week of July 2003, Medscape -- WebMD's web site for medical professionals -- asked its members what they thought about medical marijuana. It wasn't a scientific poll, although a member's vote is counted only once. Still, the results were surprising. There was a huge response. Three out of four doctors -- and nine out of 10 nurses -- said they favored decriminalization of marijuana for medical uses.

Is it a real trend? Abrams thinks so, but warns that long-held attitudes are slow to change.

"I was pretty much the Lone Ranger of medical marijuana research a few years ago. But not now," he says. "Still, researchers are wary of marijuana research. They feel their reputation may be tainted. And they may be right. For several years I've been invited to do grand rounds at a local hospital in the Bay area. Last year they disinvited me, and I hear it was because of my marijuana research. I've been disinvited from other speaking engagements, too."

"I think these attitudes will change over time -- but it will be slow-going," Mattison says. "Dr. Abrams' comment is typical. People in the medical profession may chuckle at marijuana research and think it is not a bona fide area for scientific investigation. But that will change as the science becomes more clear and more understandable and there are, at some point, some practical applications."

One surprising source of support is moral encouragement from conservative politicians.

"We get a number of stories from elected officials who say, 'Look, I am not for legalization of marijuana. But my sick mother, relative, son, is using it and doing so much better, -- there must be something in it,'" Mattison says.

"A number of people have friends where medical therapies aren't working, and cannabis provided relief from spasticity, pain, nausea, or vomiting. That is turning some opinions and helping people let go of the stereotypical notion that medical marijuana is for potheads."

The CMCR has put aside enough money to complete all its currently approved clinical trials. But the California budget crisis means no more money this year -- at least. Does this mean that clinical research into medical marijuana is over? Grant doesn't think so.

"I think that even if our center runs on hard times, the ball has started rolling," he says. "Clinicians and neuroscientists have an interest in this. There is gong to be more research, and more clinical work, whether we do it or not. Eventually, I foresee NIH [National Institutes of Health] clinical trials. That's my hunch."

A Final Warning

What's changing is the attitude toward investigating possible marijuana benefits. This means more and more doctors are keeping an open mind -- not jumping to the conclusion that the drug will be all things to all people.

"I don't know what the answers will be," Grant says. "The data that are out there suggest there will be some positive applications for marijuana. If I had to bet, I'd say there will be some applications useful for patients in the future."

But, he warns, the opposite could easily be true. The one sure thing about medical research is that it doesn't always provide the answers people expect.

"The caution is that, in the movement toward making marijuana available to patients with no other treatment options, there is the assumption that it is in fact useful. We have to be careful about that," Grant says. "It may be useful for some things, but not useful for others. And if patients take things that are not useful, they may be harming themselves. I urge them to be cautious instead of jumping on the bandwagon and maybe hurting themselves."

Health News

Medical Marijuana Slowly Gains Ground

Clinical Studies Begin to Replace Emotion with Evidence

By Daniel J. DeNoon
WebMD Medical News

August 29, 2003 -- A sea change in science is slowly turning the tide of the medical marijuana debate.

For hundreds of years, marijuana has been used to treat a wide variety of illnesses. But the herb has been illegal throughout the modern era of scientific medical research. Patients swear the drug works to relieve pain, prevent seizures, and counteract the nausea-inducing effects of cancer chemotherapy. But by today's standards, there's no definitive proof that this is so.

Why not? Nearly all U.S.-funded marijuana research has looked for harmful effects from using marijuana as a recreational drug. Meanwhile, there's been little money -- and huge regulatory hurdles -- for studies of marijuana's benefits. That's now changing despite the fact that marijuana remains classed as a Schedule I drug -- a dangerous compound with no medical uses.

Why now? Evidence is beginning to break down the wall of emotion preventing medical marijuana research.

Expert Panels, Breakthrough Findings

It was never clear exactly how marijuana -- which scientists call cannabis -- exerted its euphoria-inducing effects on the brain. Then, in the 1980s, a series of breakthrough studies showed that the body actually makes its own cannabis-like compounds -- cannabinoids.

Why are they there? That question led to the discovery that the body has an entire system based on cannabinoid signals. The signals seem to calm down overexcited nerve cells, says Igor Grant, MD, professor of psychiatry and director of the Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research (CMCR) at the University of California, San Diego.

"It may be the cannabinoid systems -- this is a crude example -- but I think of them as our internal shock absorbers," Grant tells WebMD. "They are circuits that prevent overexcitability, kind of dampers. If that's correct, there are going to be a number of medical applications. For example, I wouldn't be surprised if there were applications for epilepsy and other types of seizures."

Grant isn't the only scientist excited by these possibilities.

In 1997, a National Institutes of Health expert panel concluded that more needs to be known about possible marijuana benefits. In 1999, the Institute of Medicine agreed. It pointed to several areas crying out for clinical marijuana research, notes CMCR co-director Andrew Mattison, PhD.

"There are cannabinoid receptor systems in the brain areas that regulate motion -- and, in retrospect, we know that people with multiple sclerosis and difficulty with spasticity sometimes use medicinal cannabis. That is one of the Institute of Medicine indications for clinical trials," Mattison tells WebMD.

"There is a cannabinoid receptor for pain, another site that modulates appetite -- there's going to be a wealth of basic science research that will hopefully have clinical and practical applications to many different medical indications."

Medical Marijuana Slowly Gains Ground

Clinical Studies Begin to Replace Emotion with Evidence

(continued)

Early Clinical Findings Support More Research

Although funded through 2003 and only at various University of California locations by the California state legislature, the CMCR has, by default, become the national clearinghouse for marijuana research.

The CMCR works closely with state and federal regulators - including the FDA, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and the National Institute on Drug Abuse (the only legal source of marijuana in the U.S.). CMCR provides funds for clinical trials of marijuana. It's won national praise for holding its investigators to the highest scientific standards.

Even before the CMCR was up and running, one stubborn researcher managed to launch a marijuana clinical trial. Donald Abrams, MD, now chief of hematology/oncology at San Francisco General Hospital, is best known for being one of the first doctors to recognize and treat the illness that came to be known as AIDS. AIDS patients have long used marijuana to fight the terrible wasting the disease causes. It's also been said to help an extremely painful condition known as peripheral neuropathy -- a painful nerve disease that has few effective treatments.

Abrams wanted to get federal approval to see whether marijuana really works for this condition. But years of effort proved futile in the face of opposition by federal agencies. Finally, Abrams had a brainstorm. Marijuana affects the immune system. It was just possible that the drug was making patients worse, not better. He submitted a research proposal to look for a harmful effect of marijuana -- and finally won the approval he sought.

The results of that trial appear in the August 19 issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. And they contradict previous studies done in the test tube and with lab animals.

"Much of the published work on marijuana and the immune system is focused on animals and in vitro studies," Abrams tells WebMD. "And, well, if you flood a lot of petri dishes with THC [the active ingredient in marijuana], the immune-cell cultures are going to do poorly.

"In our clinical trial we really didn't see any detriment to the immune system from smoking cannabis. Basically we saw no perturbation of HIV viral load, no detriment to the immune system, and no significant interaction with anti-HIV drugs."

With CMCR funds, Abrams is now doing his peripheral neuropathy study. And he's well on the way to launching a study to see whether adding marijuana to other pain drugs can give relief to dying cancer patients. Overall, the CMCR now has five full-fledged clinical trials under way, which will enroll some 450 patients.

Doctors' Shifting Attitudes on Medical Marijuana

In the last week of July 2003, Medscape -- WebMD's web site for medical professionals -- asked its members what they thought about medical marijuana. It wasn't a scientific poll, although a member's vote is counted only once. Still, the results were surprising. There was a huge response. Three out of four doctors -- and nine out of 10 nurses -- said they favored decriminalization of marijuana for medical uses.

Is it a real trend? Abrams thinks so, but warns that long-held attitudes are slow to change.

"I was pretty much the Lone Ranger of medical marijuana research a few years ago. But not now," he says. "Still, researchers are wary of marijuana research. They feel their reputation may be tainted. And they may be right. For several years I've been invited to do grand rounds at a local hospital in the Bay area. Last year they disinvited me, and I hear it was because of my marijuana research. I've been disinvited from other speaking engagements, too."

"I think these attitudes will change over time -- but it will be slow-going," Mattison says. "Dr. Abrams' comment is typical. People in the medical profession may chuckle at marijuana research and think it is not a bona fide area for scientific investigation. But that will change as the science becomes more clear and more understandable and there are, at some point, some practical applications."

One surprising source of support is moral encouragement from conservative politicians.

"We get a number of stories from elected officials who say, 'Look, I am not for legalization of marijuana. But my sick mother, relative, son, is using it and doing so much better, -- there must be something in it,'" Mattison says.

"A number of people have friends where medical therapies aren't working, and cannabis provided relief from spasticity, pain, nausea, or vomiting. That is turning some opinions and helping people let go of the stereotypical notion that medical marijuana is for potheads."

The CMCR has put aside enough money to complete all its currently approved clinical trials. But the California budget crisis means no more money this year -- at least. Does this mean that clinical research into medical marijuana is over? Grant doesn't think so.

"I think that even if our center runs on hard times, the ball has started rolling," he says. "Clinicians and neuroscientists have an interest in this. There is gong to be more research, and more clinical work, whether we do it or not. Eventually, I foresee NIH [National Institutes of Health] clinical trials. That's my hunch."

A Final Warning

What's changing is the attitude toward investigating possible marijuana benefits. This means more and more doctors are keeping an open mind -- not jumping to the conclusion that the drug will be all things to all people.

"I don't know what the answers will be," Grant says. "The data that are out there suggest there will be some positive applications for marijuana. If I had to bet, I'd say there will be some applications useful for patients in the future."

But, he warns, the opposite could easily be true. The one sure thing about medical research is that it doesn't always provide the answers people expect.

"The caution is that, in the movement toward making marijuana available to patients with no other treatment options, there is the assumption that it is in fact useful. We have to be careful about that," Grant says. "It may be useful for some things, but not useful for others. And if patients take things that are not useful, they may be harming themselves. I urge them to be cautious instead of jumping on the bandwagon and maybe hurting themselves."

Doctors' Shifting Attitudes on Medical Marijuana

In the last week of July 2003, Medscape -- WebMD's web site for medical professionals -- asked its members what they thought about medical marijuana. It wasn't a scientific poll, although a member's vote is counted only once. Still, the results were surprising. There was a huge response. Three out of four doctors -- and nine out of 10 nurses -- said they favored decriminalization of marijuana for medical uses.

Is it a real trend? Abrams thinks so, but warns that long-held attitudes are slow to change.

"I was pretty much the Lone Ranger of medical marijuana research a few years ago. But not now," he says. "Still, researchers are wary of marijuana research. They feel their reputation may be tainted. And they may be right. For several years I've been invited to do grand rounds at a local hospital in the Bay area. Last year they disinvited me, and I hear it was because of my marijuana research. I've been disinvited from other speaking engagements, too."

"I think these attitudes will change over time -- but it will be slow-going," Mattison says. "Dr. Abrams' comment is typical. People in the medical profession may chuckle at marijuana research and think it is not a bona fide area for scientific investigation. But that will change as the science becomes more clear and more understandable and there are, at some point, some practical applications."

One surprising source of support is moral encouragement from conservative politicians.

"We get a number of stories from elected officials who say, 'Look, I am not for legalization of marijuana. But my sick mother, relative, son, is using it and doing so much better, -- there must be something in it,'" Mattison says.

"A number of people have friends where medical therapies aren't working, and cannabis provided relief from spasticity, pain, nausea, or vomiting. That is turning some opinions and helping people let go of the stereotypical notion that medical marijuana is for potheads."

The CMCR has put aside enough money to complete all its currently approved clinical trials. But the California budget crisis means no more money this year -- at least. Does this mean that clinical research into medical marijuana is over? Grant doesn't think so.

"I think that even if our center runs on hard times, the ball has started rolling," he says. "Clinicians and neuroscientists have an interest in this. There is gong to be more research, and more clinical work, whether we do it or not. Eventually, I foresee NIH [National Institutes of Health] clinical trials. That's my hunch."

A Final Warning

What's changing is the attitude toward investigating possible marijuana benefits. This means more and more doctors are keeping an open mind -- not jumping to the conclusion that the drug will be all things to all people.

"I don't know what the answers will be," Grant says. "The data that are out there suggest there will be some positive applications for marijuana. If I had to bet, I'd say there will be some applications useful for patients in the future."

But, he warns, the opposite could easily be true. The one sure thing about medical research is that it doesn't always provide the answers people expect.

"The caution is that, in the movement toward making marijuana available to patients with no other treatment options, there is the assumption that it is in fact useful. We have to be careful about that," Grant says. "It may be useful for some things, but not useful for others. And if patients take things that are not useful, they may be harming themselves. I urge them to be cautious instead of jumping on the bandwagon and maybe hurting themselves."

Health News

Medical Marijuana Slowly Gains Ground

Clinical Studies Begin to Replace Emotion with Evidence

By Daniel J. DeNoon
WebMD Medical News

August 29, 2003 -- A sea change in science is slowly turning the tide of the medical marijuana debate.

For hundreds of years, marijuana has been used to treat a wide variety of illnesses. But the herb has been illegal throughout the modern era of scientific medical research. Patients swear the drug works to relieve pain, prevent seizures, and counteract the nausea-inducing effects of cancer chemotherapy. But by today's standards, there's no definitive proof that this is so.

Why not? Nearly all U.S.-funded marijuana research has looked for harmful effects from using marijuana as a recreational drug. Meanwhile, there's been little money -- and huge regulatory hurdles -- for studies of marijuana's benefits. That's now changing despite the fact that marijuana remains classed as a Schedule I drug -- a dangerous compound with no medical uses.

Why now? Evidence is beginning to break down the wall of emotion preventing medical marijuana research.

Expert Panels, Breakthrough Findings

It was never clear exactly how marijuana -- which scientists call cannabis -- exerted its euphoria-inducing effects on the brain. Then, in the 1980s, a series of breakthrough studies showed that the body actually makes its own cannabis-like compounds -- cannabinoids.

Why are they there? That question led to the discovery that the body has an entire system based on cannabinoid signals. The signals seem to calm down overexcited nerve cells, says Igor Grant, MD, professor of psychiatry and director of the Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research (CMCR) at the University of California, San Diego.

"It may be the cannabinoid systems -- this is a crude example -- but I think of them as our internal shock absorbers," Grant tells WebMD. "They are circuits that prevent overexcitability, kind of dampers. If that's correct, there are going to be a number of medical applications. For example, I wouldn't be surprised if there were applications for epilepsy and other types of seizures."

Grant isn't the only scientist excited by these possibilities.

In 1997, a National Institutes of Health expert panel concluded that more needs to be known about possible marijuana benefits. In 1999, the Institute of Medicine agreed. It pointed to several areas crying out for clinical marijuana research, notes CMCR co-director Andrew Mattison, PhD.

"There are cannabinoid receptor systems in the brain areas that regulate motion -- and, in retrospect, we know that people with multiple sclerosis and difficulty with spasticity sometimes use medicinal cannabis. That is one of the Institute of Medicine indications for clinical trials," Mattison tells WebMD.

"There is a cannabinoid receptor for pain, another site that modulates appetite -- there's going to be a wealth of basic science research that will hopefully have clinical and practical applications to many different medical indications."

Medical Marijuana Slowly Gains Ground

Clinical Studies Begin to Replace Emotion with Evidence

(continued)

Early Clinical Findings Support More Research

Although funded through 2003 and only at various University of California locations by the California state legislature, the CMCR has, by default, become the national clearinghouse for marijuana research.

The CMCR works closely with state and federal regulators - including the FDA, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and the National Institute on Drug Abuse (the only legal source of marijuana in the U.S.). CMCR provides funds for clinical trials of marijuana. It's won national praise for holding its investigators to the highest scientific standards.

Even before the CMCR was up and running, one stubborn researcher managed to launch a marijuana clinical trial. Donald Abrams, MD, now chief of hematology/oncology at San Francisco General Hospital, is best known for being one of the first doctors to recognize and treat the illness that came to be known as AIDS. AIDS patients have long used marijuana to fight the terrible wasting the disease causes. It's also been said to help an extremely painful condition known as peripheral neuropathy -- a painful nerve disease that has few effective treatments.

Abrams wanted to get federal approval to see whether marijuana really works for this condition. But years of effort proved futile in the face of opposition by federal agencies. Finally, Abrams had a brainstorm. Marijuana affects the immune system. It was just possible that the drug was making patients worse, not better. He submitted a research proposal to look for a harmful effect of marijuana -- and finally won the approval he sought.

The results of that trial appear in the August 19 issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. And they contradict previous studies done in the test tube and with lab animals.

"Much of the published work on marijuana and the immune system is focused on animals and in vitro studies," Abrams tells WebMD. "And, well, if you flood a lot of petri dishes with THC [the active ingredient in marijuana], the immune-cell cultures are going to do poorly.

"In our clinical trial we really didn't see any detriment to the immune system from smoking cannabis. Basically we saw no perturbation of HIV viral load, no detriment to the immune system, and no significant interaction with anti-HIV drugs."

With CMCR funds, Abrams is now doing his peripheral neuropathy study. And he's well on the way to launching a study to see whether adding marijuana to other pain drugs can give relief to dying cancer patients. Overall, the CMCR now has five full-fledged clinical trials under way, which will enroll some 450 patients.

Doctors' Shifting Attitudes on Medical Marijuana

In the last week of July 2003, Medscape -- WebMD's web site for medical professionals -- asked its members what they thought about medical marijuana. It wasn't a scientific poll, although a member's vote is counted only once. Still, the results were surprising. There was a huge response. Three out of four doctors -- and nine out of 10 nurses -- said they favored decriminalization of marijuana for medical uses.

Is it a real trend? Abrams thinks so, but warns that long-held attitudes are slow to change.

"I was pretty much the Lone Ranger of medical marijuana research a few years ago. But not now," he says. "Still, researchers are wary of marijuana research. They feel their reputation may be tainted. And they may be right. For several years I've been invited to do grand rounds at a local hospital in the Bay area. Last year they disinvited me, and I hear it was because of my marijuana research. I've been disinvited from other speaking engagements, too."

"I think these attitudes will change over time -- but it will be slow-going," Mattison says. "Dr. Abrams' comment is typical. People in the medical profession may chuckle at marijuana research and think it is not a bona fide area for scientific investigation. But that will change as the science becomes more clear and more understandable and there are, at some point, some practical applications."

One surprising source of support is moral encouragement from conservative politicians.

"We get a number of stories from elected officials who say, 'Look, I am not for legalization of marijuana. But my sick mother, relative, son, is using it and doing so much better, -- there must be something in it,'" Mattison says.

"A number of people have friends where medical therapies aren't working, and cannabis provided relief from spasticity, pain, nausea, or vomiting. That is turning some opinions and helping people let go of the stereotypical notion that medical marijuana is for potheads."

The CMCR has put aside enough money to complete all its currently approved clinical trials. But the California budget crisis means no more money this year -- at least. Does this mean that clinical research into medical marijuana is over? Grant doesn't think so.

"I think that even if our center runs on hard times, the ball has started rolling," he says. "Clinicians and neuroscientists have an interest in this. There is gong to be more research, and more clinical work, whether we do it or not. Eventually, I foresee NIH [National Institutes of Health] clinical trials. That's my hunch."

A Final Warning

What's changing is the attitude toward investigating possible marijuana benefits. This means more and more doctors are keeping an open mind -- not jumping to the conclusion that the drug will be all things to all people.

"I don't know what the answers will be," Grant says. "The data that are out there suggest there will be some positive applications for marijuana. If I had to bet, I'd say there will be some applications useful for patients in the future."

But, he warns, the opposite could easily be true. The one sure thing about medical research is that it doesn't always provide the answers people expect.

"The caution is that, in the movement toward making marijuana available to patients with no other treatment options, there is the assumption that it is in fact useful. We have to be careful about that," Grant says. "It may be useful for some things, but not useful for others. And if patients take things that are not useful, they may be harming themselves. I urge them to be cautious instead of jumping on the bandwagon and maybe hurting themselves."

Doctors' Shifting Attitudes on Medical Marijuana

In the last week of July 2003, Medscape -- WebMD's web site for medical professionals -- asked its members what they thought about medical marijuana. It wasn't a scientific poll, although a member's vote is counted only once. Still, the results were surprising. There was a huge response. Three out of four doctors -- and nine out of 10 nurses -- said they favored decriminalization of marijuana for medical uses.

Is it a real trend? Abrams thinks so, but warns that long-held attitudes are slow to change.

"I was pretty much the Lone Ranger of medical marijuana research a few years ago. But not now," he says. "Still, researchers are wary of marijuana research. They feel their reputation may be tainted. And they may be right. For several years I've been invited to do grand rounds at a local hospital in the Bay area. Last year they disinvited me, and I hear it was because of my marijuana research. I've been disinvited from other speaking engagements, too."

"I think these attitudes will change over time -- but it will be slow-going," Mattison says. "Dr. Abrams' comment is typical. People in the medical profession may chuckle at marijuana research and think it is not a bona fide area for scientific investigation. But that will change as the science becomes more clear and more understandable and there are, at some point, some practical applications."

One surprising source of support is moral encouragement from conservative politicians.

"We get a number of stories from elected officials who say, 'Look, I am not for legalization of marijuana. But my sick mother, relative, son, is using it and doing so much better, -- there must be something in it,'" Mattison says.

"A number of people have friends where medical therapies aren't working, and cannabis provided relief from spasticity, pain, nausea, or vomiting. That is turning some opinions and helping people let go of the stereotypical notion that medical marijuana is for potheads."

The CMCR has put aside enough money to complete all its currently approved clinical trials. But the California budget crisis means no more money this year -- at least. Does this mean that clinical research into medical marijuana is over? Grant doesn't think so.

"I think that even if our center runs on hard times, the ball has started rolling," he says. "Clinicians and neuroscientists have an interest in this. There is gong to be more research, and more clinical work, whether we do it or not. Eventually, I foresee NIH [National Institutes of Health] clinical trials. That's my hunch."

A Final Warning

What's changing is the attitude toward investigating possible marijuana benefits. This means more and more doctors are keeping an open mind -- not jumping to the conclusion that the drug will be all things to all people.

"I don't know what the answers will be," Grant says. "The data that are out there suggest there will be some positive applications for marijuana. If I had to bet, I'd say there will be some applications useful for patients in the future."

But, he warns, the opposite could easily be true. The one sure thing about medical research is that it doesn't always provide the answers people expect.

"The caution is that, in the movement toward making marijuana available to patients with no other treatment options, there is the assumption that it is in fact useful. We have to be careful about that," Grant says. "It may be useful for some things, but not useful for others. And if patients take things that are not useful, they may be harming themselves. I urge them to be cautious instead of jumping on the bandwagon and maybe hurting themselves."

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We signed the "LEGALIZE MEDICAL MARIJANA" petition!
# 108:
9:05 pm PDT, Aug 26, Megan Debacker, Texas
# 107:
4:07 pm PDT, Aug 25, Brandon Berryman, Oklahoma
marijana is gods plant
# 106:
12:05 pm PDT, Aug 25, Jason Vaughn, Alabama
# 105:
2:23 pm PDT, Aug 24, Scott Wheelock, Iowa
How our government, Federal, State, etc can continue to exploit those of us that use marijuana for whatever it is that we use it for is beyond me. To exploit the poor because there sick and to deny them something that works for them is what I'd call sick. Our government is as crooked as they come and they lock me up for my use of the drug. Who's the one that's the crook, or criminal.

Alcohol kills more than marijuana ever has or ever will.

# 104:
9:54 pm PDT, Aug 22, Name not displayed, Connecticut
This is not a drug. Vikadin is legal and has dangerous sid-effects... Althoug Marijuana is illegal and same effects, cannot be overdosed, and can be regulated just as easy. So why is it illegal?

Alcohal is legal because the gov. has found a way to regulate it and because they can make money from it. But they can do the same with marijuana.

# 103:
11:12 pm PDT, Aug 19, Name not displayed, Washington
taxing it will help the us debt!
# 102:
2:29 am PDT, Aug 18, Steveo Wunsche, Michigan
Make it legal, make some money, make more jobs, make the people happy!!!
# 101:
1:57 am PDT, Aug 15, Name not displayed, California
weed is the best thing in the world
# 100:
7:18 pm PDT, Aug 14, Holly Connell, Tennessee
i think that pills r worst than weed i hate pills weed do not make me fall a sleep in my food
# 99:
2:02 pm PDT, Aug 7, Kris Simon, California
its a non lethel plant ints not man made and its not sentheticly made so why make it illegal?
# 98:
1:36 pm PDT, Aug 2, Amber Shaffner, Virginia
i have bipolar disorder and i have since i was 16 years old, well thats when it got REALLY bad, i have tried to kill myself to many times to admit, i have ruined soooo many relationships with friends and family casue of it. NOW...my whole point in tellin u this is....casue i have also smoked weed since i was 16 and i only smoke when i feel an "episode" (as we like to call them) coming on....it calms me down immediently!!! Then i call everyone back and say im sorry for saying what i said and doin what i did. i have taken over 40 different medications in my life, infact i used to be 110lbs most my life and now im 26 years old and 170lbs from tryin allllll the meds to make me act right nad feel better. My brain wont let me be happy, but when i smoke i feel like everyone else in a good situation instead of makin it bad. i dont know where im going with this, but i wanted to share that....marijana helps not just destroys as most would LOVE to believe....i'm for makin it legal, casue i just want to b happy and some what normal and i dont wanna have to worry bout going to jail from gettin caught from buyin some medicine thats the only thing that makes me not wanna die!!
# 97:
7:48 am PDT, Jul 31, Randall Voss, Washington
# 96:
9:10 pm PDT, Jul 30, BARRY GIBBS, Florida
# 95:
3:39 pm PDT, Jul 30, Liz Hawk, Missouri
PLEASE COMENT

why is alcohol lecal?

# 94:
9:03 am PDT, Jul 29, Name not displayed, Pennsylvania
# 93:
10:23 pm PDT, Jul 24, Brenda Ross, Georgia
The only reason I can think of to Not leaglize mariqana is the weight gain..We rob refrigeratators not Banks
# 92:
9:02 am PDT, Jul 22, Roy Robb, Oklahoma
high my name is roy robb i am a resident of oklahom and i am want to go around and see if i can get as many signatures as i can i suffer from extreme anxiety wich makes it hard for me to function in everyday life weather its goin to the store or going in to public places it has been very crippling i am on probation for some mistake i made when i was 19 i am now 21 and as many of you know you can smoke marijuana wile you are on probation i have received and are still enrolled in drug and alcohol counseling and we have determind that i smoke pot because i have extreme anxiety its not that i just want to smoke pot i need it for my anxiety thank you for listing

if ahlcohol is legal i tink pot should be

# 91:
11:26 pm PDT, Jul 21, Tayla Hull, New Zealand
# 90:
3:52 pm PDT, Jul 20, Name not displayed, Texas
I am suffring from prostate cancer need help with pain
# 89:
4:55 pm PDT, Jul 12, Gary Boerner, Montana
I am 52 and have had bad migrains headacks sence I was nine years old. I am not a lazy person and have worked hard all my life. The drug makes life better and should be legal. I think why are tobaco legal which has been proven hvary addive.I know I had to quit tobaco.or die!

If anything this should be not be sold I quit drinking and canibis got me to not drink any more.I think congress works this way money talks blushit walks......Tobaco and accoall got the money!

# 88:
5:07 pm PDT, Jul 6, Robyn Erler, California
# 87:
2:46 pm PDT, Jul 4, Puffy Mangus, New York
# 86:
3:11 pm PDT, Jul 2, Sue-Ellen Miller, Connecticut
# 85:
6:13 am PDT, Jul 2, Constance Maslow, Virginia
I am Drug/ AL group leader ....@ 61 I have smoked my share as a young kid BUT as one gets older it is just to much hassel....however when my father was dying 1995 of rare prostrate he had gotten weed....he gave it to me one late night as we used to watch old reruns of Colunbo and Maverick etc and he drank (yes even with all the drugs he was on) and gave me the weed...I lite up and 10 = 15 minutes later I looked at him and said excuse me is this what medical weed was given to you??? It was terrible......NO Nothing...I said I am through this away OK?....so I did and I was really angry that this was what he was given as to help him in his dying process...what a joke....

I don't drink never have etc maybe as a kid showing off till my first year in college I got so sick I swore NEVER....it just makes me feel terrible/naus..so why bother BUT as having worked in detox and Alchol was the most dangerous and longer stay then anything else....and if you were coming into detox and your only choice of drug was referr guess what you didn't get in unless there was a second drug that the pt used!!!!.....in others words weed by itself didn't get you into detox wards!!!!?????

# 84:
4:57 pm PDT, Jun 28, Duke Deltree, Maine
# 83:
3:27 pm PDT, Jun 25, Name not displayed, Texas
# 82:
7:58 pm PDT, Jun 19, Ben Lee, Florida
# 81:
2:09 pm PDT, Jun 2, Chudie Wantero, California
LEGALIZE POT

NOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!

# 80:
6:11 pm PDT, Jun 1, Brianna Barnes, Utah
# 79:
1:18 pm PDT, May 27, Derrick Lowe, Pennsylvania
I am a c5 quadpeplgic that has lots of pain and terrible skeletal and muscular spasms and taken every know pharmacutacal med and they all had bad side effects,bud is the only thing that has helped so far,but i can't hardly get it..When it going to bbe legalized in my state?
# 78:
7:23 pm PDT, May 24, CRYSTAL BRYANT, Indiana
# 77:
8:18 am PDT, May 12, Tawnee Baird, Utah
i think that marijuana should be legalized personally. it does no more harm then cigarrettes do, and it could help the economy.

because its peoples buisness if they wanna be an alcoholic or just have a fun time its not hard to drink and not become addicted

# 76:
6:03 am PDT, May 11, Seth Rose, Ohio
# 75:
1:11 pm PDT, May 8, Name not displayed, Texas
# 74:
12:17 am PDT, May 8, Saskia Birkinshaw, Australia
This is a last resort for people who are truly suffering. It should be tightly controlled. And making it illegal hasn't seemed to stop anyone smoking it anyway.
# 73:
7:33 am PDT, May 7, Caleb Smith, Texas
i think there ar e a lot of medical benefits of using this drug, such as pain loss, apitite, and anger releif, no addiction.

im not sure why alcohol is legal, because it has harmful side effects but we as a counrty rely on its production. it causes liver failer and all types of illnesses.

# 72:
7:53 pm PDT, May 6, Blake Winkler, Connecticut
i am only 16 years old and even i can see that leaglizing pot is the best thing for the us. at this time. the goverment is retarted bc its a millon dollar opperation, would give millons jobs and who is to say it would be abused if its never been leagle.

i strongly feel alchol is clearly worse then pot.how is it that alchol witch can kill you is leagle wile pot witch simply mellows u and i feel make u a better ad nicer person is not.

# 71:
11:37 am PDT, May 3, Michael Quakenbush, California
Achole kills people.
# 70:
12:55 pm PDT, Apr 19, Name not displayed, Ohio
I believe that marijuana can be very beneficial in helping to relieve several ailments. I have constant headaches and the only thing I've ever found that helps is marijuana.

I think marijuana is less of a problem than alcohol and it's legal. have you ever seen anyone overdose on marijuana? I have not and have never heard of anyone overdosing, but alcohol can be lethal if too much is consumed. marijuana has health benefits, but alcohol does not. It would be beneficial for economy to legalize marijuana. just think about how much money our country would save and earn if they legalized it. 10 billion dollars is spent annually on keeping marijuana at bay, but what if they made it legal. More jobs would come available for cultivating it, the price could be taxed like cigarettes and we all know how much our country needs money. what is the real harm of legalizing marijuana?

# 69:
7:52 am PDT, Mar 30, Jason Herning, Florida
The war on drugs is not working. We spend billions a year only to see our friends and children end up in jail. It is time we make billions with this rather than waste what God gave us in the first place.
# 68:
8:56 am PDT, Mar 27, Claudia Tapia Guerrero, Mexico
As long as marihuana/marijuana is carefully used, it should be legal.

Alcohol is legal, why can't marihuana be so.

# 67:
8:05 pm PDT, Mar 25, NIna Nicole Riddick, Georgia
If there can be studies using stem cells; there is no reason not to investigate probable cures using a natural herb. If the effects arent harmful, it would be a good cash crop,therfore, helping the economy, while, helping advancements in the medical field. I am a person who suffers from epilepsy. I have taken many medications that have adverse effects: such as suicidal thoughts and severe depression. What it comes down to, is whether or not, the government is willing to legalize it, and risk loss of money from the ileagality of marijuana; or the they find other ways to benefit finacially. ie: taxes, farming, medical fees, ect...

This is a very good question. People in society do not look down upon drinking. However, it is responsible for millions of deaths per year. Drunk drivers who are to intoxicated to think about the rest of the world, living responsibility, that the put in danger. However, the small intoxicating effects of marrijuana is such a tboo issue. Let me ask you this, how many times have you heard about a robber, hopped up on marijuana, and going on a rampage.

# 66:
10:58 pm PDT, Mar 23, Marcus A Ahmakak, Alaska
Yes i think this would be alright to..helping my other half that needs it with the car crash in 1997.. it also helps me ..Alchohol its all man made beer god made pot with mother nature.. who put this here???
# 65:
3:15 pm PDT, Mar 23, James Adams, California
we need the revenue and the drug cartel to leave this contry
# 64:
3:27 pm PDT, Mar 14, Patresha Burnell, Alaska
Yes I think this would be okay! Because I was hit by a truck in 1997 and my pain doesn't go away! This really helps with most of the pain. But not all of it!

What I see with alcohol is that it bring's the real you in side how you feel. And some times it is just not good.

# 63:
2:40 pm PDT, Mar 12, James Nicholas, California
I have chronic pain in my back and neck and curently have a california medical marijuana Recomendation. If it wasn't for my medication I would have to take handfulls of IBProfen.

I have never heard of a violent crime comited when a person only consumed marijuana and no other drugs including alcohol. I have found from experience that the good effects of marijuana can't be injoyed when in combination with alcohol. You just get stupid!

# 62:
1:02 pm PDT, Mar 12, Kathleen Nicholas, California
We need the revenue and it ould get rid of alot of the crimes.

Alcohol is worse for you than marijauna! It relives my pain! It does not effect my liver the way alchol does

# 61:
1:03 pm PDT, Mar 11, Rhonda Knouse, MSW, CRT, Pennsylvania
PLEASE COMENT There are a number of reasons for why I believe that marijuana has medical properties and can help to relieve the needless suffering of many individuals suffering from one illness or many. I myslef have suffered illness my entire adult life. I was diagnosed with a rare disease "Cushing;s Syndrome" at the young age of 24 years. Another feature of this disease was to allow my body to develop Avascular Necrosis of my joints causing me to have bilateral total hip replacements and a right shoulder replacement all on top of having my pituitary gland removed and then both of my adrenal glands removed as well. To top it off I fell down a flight of stairs and injured my spine in three areas causing me to develop Reflect Sympathetic Dystropy and to have severe peripheral neuropathy as a result of this disease. Then to put the cherry on top I have been diagnosed with a rare cancer, I have metastasized Carcinoid Lung Cancer. I am sick all of the time with nausea and my hands, feet and legs just burn and hurt all of the time with marijuana being the ONLY thing that brings me any kind of relief. The Doctors have gotten me hooked on Oxycontin. I fought taking the drug but when the muscle spasms from one of my diseases began to break my ribs I decided to give in and take the drug. It was wonderful at first, but i am now use to the drug and am in pain all of the time once again. The pain from the withdrawl is terrible, I could increase my dose but when do we reach a point where that no longer works either. This drug is a legal controlled medical drug, which has an addiction that is worse than that of Heroin. This drug causes me more greif and pain than anything I could have ever imagined in my life. What society calls pill-head addicts have been created out of the 30 plus drug war and have now forced the kids to find other ways to get high, creating pill-head addicts. Once these pill-head addicts know of a sick individual who is taking narcotic medications, robbery begins as is my case. I have been robbed twice now, with the lastest incident involving the suspect breaking my basement window and stealing all of my medications. The police have taken this less than serious and it gives me a horrible feeling of being policed but not protected. Legalizing or decriminalizing medical marijuana would hurt the pharmeceutical companies, yes, but so what, they think nothing of hurting us with their drugs that never cure. What right does anyone have to tell me what I can use to make myself feel better after my cancer treatments or during times of severe nausea or times of terrible screaming peripheral pain. What right, especially if I am going to die anyway. I want the government out of my home and body. Quit policing me and start making me feel safe by protecting me from becoming a victim of a crime.

why is alcohol lecal?

# 60:
7:46 am PDT, Mar 9, Jared Peters, Kansas
# 59:
7:13 am PST, Mar 4, Roger Nehring, South Dakota
# 58:
12:03 pm PST, Feb 28, Rusty Snow, California
I think Marijana as a whole, not just for medical uses, should be legalized. The main reason is that the governments efforts to curtail the use of marijana has been completely ineffective and a waste of our money and I do not think the cost justifies the results.
# 57:
5:16 pm PST, Feb 22, Michelle Boyd, New York
# 56:
8:30 am PST, Feb 19, Danielle Green, California
# 55:
6:03 pm PST, Feb 18, Joan Mclaughlin, Pennsylvania
# 54:
9:36 am PST, Feb 16, Abigail Taylor, Kentucky
If in the past marijuana has worked then we should use it. If it helps illnesses why not try it. You can't die from marijuana it only makes you hungry and thirsty. Other drugs the doctors might give us can kill us if we overdose.

Millions of people are killed by drinking every year. If its drunk driving, or just the alcohol eating away their insides. But the government doesn't ban alcohol. If the government isn't going to make marijuana legal for medicine then they should do away with alcohol sales.

# 53:
1:35 am PST, Feb 11, Alan Paradis, Connecticut
Please also sign: http://www.thepetitionsite.com/26/legalize-marijuana-and-end-the-senseless-war-on-drugs. Marijuana prohibition and jailing nonviolent drug offenders does absolutely no good and is hurting millions of innocent people and even killing some.
# 52:
9:52 pm PST, Jan 29, Wesley Gilbo, California
why i feel that "marijuana" should be legal is because marijuana has no scientific proof of side effects other then being thirsty and hunger not like other drugs, where they can give you mood swings to even death. No one has died from an over dose of marijuana. Marijuana has helped so many people with their medical issues. I feel the government has not legalize it because they would loose so much money. Medically drugs would not be bought and there for loose money for research on new drugs. We need to stay with natural instead of chemical use.

is it just me i feel alcohol should be illegal so many people die from drinking and driving but a lot more die from getting hit by those who are drinking and driving i am sure we all have known someone that has die because of a drunk driver hit them

# 51:
8:41 am PST, Jan 27, Tianna Perez, New Mexico
I feel that smoking marijana is not a bad thing peopls act like its a bad drug in all realty it isnt as bad as some think.
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