Friday, 14 December 2012

marijuana`s love ...

Benefits of medical marijuana

The use of marijuana is associated with the stimulation of appetite and relief from nausea. Marijuana use reduces muscle spasms and relieves eye pressure for glaucoma patients. The drug is also used in the treatment of health complications such as epilepsy, AIDS and HIV, sexual dysfunction, anxiety and panic attack s, multiple sclerosis, arthritis, and fibromyalgia.                                               
In addition to that, the benefits of medical marijuana extend to the treatment of health diseases such as alcohol abuse, spinal cord injuries, cancer, bipolar disorder, depression, Alzheimer’s disease, inflammatory bowel disease, migraines, and fibromyalgia. Medical marijuana is also useful to treating posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), sleep apnea, Parkinson’s disease, sickle-cell disease, and psoriasis.
These and many more positive effects of marijuana surely suggest that the drug is one of the best drugs known to the mankind and can be extremely useful when used medically under an expert doctor’s supervision.

Marijuana will not tolerate repression. Tranquillizers and depressants relax the body and release tension, but the state of mind associated with these drugs is “unconsciousness” whereby we escape rather than resolve our dilemmas. Alcoholism is an extreme need of both the body and personality sometimes to release the nervousness that has accumulated and continues to build up to an unbearable degree. It serves the same function for the collective personality for the society, as well A culture in which alcohol and tranquillizers are the prevalent form of release prefers not to witness internal confusion and actually choose to act without conscious participation, maintaining a semi-numb condition.” – Joan Bello
“Marijuana can act as the loosening agent, so that whatever has been banned from consciousness may come cascading forth. To uncover our deceptions without our usual rationalizations can be unpleasant, an experience that has turned many psychologically fragile individuals away from marijuana despite its therapeutic catharsis.” – Joan Bello.
Cannabidiol (CBD) may stop breast cancer from spreading throughout the body, according to a 2007 study at the California Pacific Medical Center Research Institute. Investigators at Columbia University revealed that HIV/AIDS patients who inhaled cannabis four times daily experienced substantial increases in food intake with no impairment of cognitive performance and little evidence of discomfort.
One of the biggest benefits associated with use of medical marijuana is the relief of chronic or neuropathic pain. The effect of medical marijuana treatment in HIV patients who experience neuropathic pain was highlighted in a study published in February 2009 in the journal Neuropsychopharmacology. Dr. Ellis and colleagues found in the study that 46 percent of patients administered with medical marijuana experienced at least a 30 percent reduction in pain. In contrast, only 18 percent of patients administered with placebo achieved similar results.
We hope that this piece of information on the positive effects of marijuana and benefits of medical marijuana helped you understand the drug in a better way.
References:
National Cancer Institute: Marijuana Use in Supportive Care for Cancer Patients
Neuropsychopharmacology; Smoked medicinal cannabis for neuropathic pain in HIV: a randomized, crossover clinical trial; RJ Ellis, et. al.; February 2009
Drug Free: Marijuana Facts
Chuder, Eric C., “Neuroscience for Kids: Marijuana,” University of Washington, Revised 2008.
SAMHSA’s National Clearinghouse for Alcohol & Drug Information. “Tips for Teens: The Truth About Marijuana,” Revised May 2004.
National Institute on Drug Abuse. “Marijuana: Facts Parents Need to Know.” Revised August 2007.



MORE INFORMATION 


http://www.imarijuana.com/research/positive-effects-of-marijuanahttp://www.marijuana.com/

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