@Rocco
Ud fra hvad konkluderer du at Gaanjafarmer ikke ved hvad han taler om?
Grundlaget er vel de videnskabelige undersøgelser der er lavet på området, som har vist at THC øger den antinociceptive effekt af morfin?
Jeg vil skyde på Gaanjafarmer refererer til de resultater Prof. Sandra Welch kom frem til, som står i Rowan Robinson's "Den store bog om hamp" s.66. Jeg gad ikke lige skrive det ind, men der står det samme som på denne
side:
Citat:
2n.
Opiate Addiction --- In some cases, cannabis can serve to alleviate the symptoms of opiate withdrawal. As early as 1885, Dr. E. Birch reported the successful treatment of an opium addict and a chloral-hydrate addict by cannabis substitution and slow withdrawal. In 1891, Dr. J.B. Mattison held forth that "It has proved an efficient substitute for the poppy", and he described the case of "a naval surgeon, nine years a ten grains daily morphia taker... [who] recovered with less than a dozen doses. He recommended cannabis accordingly:
"[Cannabis is] a drug that has a special value in some morbid conditions, and the intrinsic merit and safety of which entitles it to a place it once held in therapeutics... Indian hemp is not here intended as a specific. It will, at times, fail. So do other drugs. But the many cases in which it acts well, entitle it to a large and lasting confidence." (79-81)
In a study of 49 cases of opiate withdrawal, conducted in 1942 by Drs. S. Allentuck and K. Bowman, cannabis was substituted for opium:
"The withdrawal symptoms were ameliorated or eliminated sooner, the patient was in a better frame of mind, his spirits were elevated, his physical condition was more rapidly rehabilitated, and he expressed a wish to resume his occupation sooner." (82)
Prof. Sandra Welch (Virginia Commonwealth Univ.) found that THC has a pronounced potentiating effect on morphine. At a low dose, THC increases the analgesic effect of morphine by 500%. At double the dose of THC, the effect is 10 times greater. The effect is not additive, and is relatively safe:
"One major advantage to a marijuana-morphine combination would be to reduce both the morphine component and a major morphine side-effect, depression of the respiratory system. It has already been confirmed that marijuana has no effect on the medulla, the center of the brain that controls respiration." (164)
This singular finding may lead to newsas methods of treating opiate addiction.
Tjek desuden
Antinociceptive Synergy between 9-Tetrahydrocannabinol and Opioids after Oral Administration - Diana L. Cichewicz and Erin A. McCarthyEnhancement mu opioid antinociception by oral delta9-tetrahydrocannabinol: dose-response analysis and receptor identification - Cichewicz DL, Martin ZL, Smith FL, Welch SP
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology,
Medical College of Virginia/Virginia Commonwealth University,
Richmond, Virginia, USA.
Jpn J Pharmacol 1999 Apr; 79(4):427-31samt
Antinociceptive activity of intrathecally administered cannabinoids alone, and in combination with morphine, in mice - SP Welch and DL StevensHusk google er din ven, og lad vær med at udtale dig om noget du ikke ved noget om

(Beklager jeg flamer, men synes det var på sin plads lige i dit tilfælde

)