Marijuana Compound Spurs Brain Cell Growth

MedicalNeed

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When it comes to the controversy surrounding medical marijuana, an international team of researchers is busy stirring the pot by releasing findings that suggest the drug helps promote brain cell growth while treating mood disorders.

According to the study in rats, a super-potent synthetic version of the cannabinoid compound found in marijuana can reduce depression and anxiety when taken over an extended period of time.

This mood boost seems to be the result of the drug's ability to promote the growth of new brain cells, something no other addictive drug appears able to do, the researchers say.

The findings, which appear in the November issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, remain preliminary, however.

"Our results were obtained from rats, and there's a big difference between rats and humans," said study co-author Dr. Xia Zhang, of the neuropsychiatry research unit in the department of psychiatry at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon, Canada. "So, I don't really don't know yet if our findings apply to humans. But our results indicate that the clinical use of marijuana could make people feel better by helping control anxiety and depression."

The new findings come on the heels of a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in June granting federal authorities the power to stop doctors from prescribing marijuana. That decision also bars individuals from cultivating the herb for medical purposes.

The decision overrides laws currently on the books in 11 states which had legalized the use of marijuana for patients receiving a doctor's approval. According to the ruling, the Supreme Court justices made their decision on the basis of interstate commerce regulations rather than on an evaluation of the pros and cons of medical marijuana use.

But does medical marijuana work? To help settle that question, Zhang's team focused on the potential of a synthetic laboratory-produced form of the cannabinoid compound naturally found in the marijuana plant.

Humans and other animals also naturally produce the compound, and are known to have cannabinoid receptors lying on the surface of cells in the nervous system and the immune system.

Prior research has shown that, when exposed to cannabinoids, these receptors can provoke an anti-inflammatory and anti-convulsive response. They can also instigate a range of psychotropic effects such as euphoria.

The current study focused on a particular formulation of synthetic cannabinoid known as HU210 -- a compound which Zhang described as the most powerful cannabinoid in the world.

The authors explored both the short-term and long-term effects of exposure to HU210 in rats.

To measure the drug's short-term response, they gave adult rats a single injection of HU210. To study the same drug's effect over the longer term, the researchers gave a separate group of adult rats twice-daily injections of the cannabinoid over a two-week period.

Autopsies revealed that by the end of the 10-day HU210 treatment regimen, new neurons had been generated and integrated into the circuitry of the hippocampus region of the rat's brains. This process, known as neurogenesis, was still in evidence a full month after treatment had been initiated.

Neurogenesis was not triggered in response to brain cells being killed through cannabinoid exposure, the researchers add. In fact, HU210 injections did not appear to prompt any loss of neurons in the hippocampus.

Cannabinoid use appeared to boost mood, as well: According to the scientists, behavioral tests suggest that long-term treatment reduced the rodent's anxiety- and depression-linked behaviors.

For example, one month post-treatment, treated rats deprived of food for 48 hours were quicker than similarly deprived, non-treated rats to begin eating food when it was finally offered to them in an unfamiliar environment.

The researchers believe treated rats may have been less anxious in the manner they handled this novel situation. They stress the results were not related to cannabinoids' appetite-stimulating effects, since the treated rats' eating behavior was similar to that of untreated rats when they were offered food in a familiar setting.

Treated rats also responded in a less anxious manner to swimming and climbing tests, and displayed shorter periods of immobility compared with untreated rats. The latter finding was interpreted to mean that HU210 had an antidepressant effect on rats receiving the cannabinoid over the longer term.

However, while long-term administration of higher doses worked to reduce anxiety and depression, lower doses did not appear to have the same effect, the researchers added.

Zhang and his associates credit cannabinoid-linked neurogenesis with the apparent mood shifts seen in the animals.

The hippocampus area of the brain where the neuronal growth occurred is key to the regulation of stress and other mood disorders, Zhang's team point out. This region is also important to the control of cognitive processes such as learning and memory.

Among the common addictive drugs, marijuana alone appears able to promote neurogenesis when used over time and in the right dosage, the researchers say. In contrast, prior research has demonstrated that chronic administration of cocaine, opiates, alcohol and nicotine inhibits brain cell growth.

"If our results can be confirmed in humans, we should anticipate the chronic use of marijuana as a medical treatment for anxiety and depression," Zhang said.

However, he cautioned that "this treatment is not the same as smoking marijuana. Whether smoking marijuana can produce the same effect, we just don't know."

Dr. Perry G. Fine, a professor of anesthesiology at the University of Utah School of Medicine Pain Research Center, said more than enough data has already been gathered to confirm medical marijuana's potential benefits.

"It's great that there's new science, but to me this is no longer an epiphany," he said. "It's just proving what's been long-suspected. We're behind the curve with the cannabinoids largely because of the stigma of marijuana going years and years back."

"I think most people with clinical expertise in the area of palliative medicine know that if patients had access to all the tools we currently have, we could certainly do a whole lot better to help people live with multiple chronic diseases," he added. "The social policies are way behind our technology, and that's where we need some catching up."


NewsHawk: MedicalNeed: 420 MAGAZINE
Source: healingwell.com
Author: Alan Mozes
Contact: HealingWell.com
Copyright: 1999-2011 e-Healthcare Solutions
Website: Marijuana Compound Spurs Brain Cell Growth
 
ive a brain injury. brain surgery was done on 9-12-06, to implant a rod with 4 ecectrodes on it. then a micro processor was implanted in my chest area just under the skin. i was able to get the voltage up to 3.6 volts every 1 minute at 60 hrtz. saddly there was no relief.
I then found quality gennetics and its a different world now!! Besides the excrusiating pain i go through, i now have some wicked depression!! Ive receintly noticed that cannabis helps with the mood disorder also.
It would be so nice not to have to grow my own medicine! i have little time for other activities. seeing how the garden is inside there is no sun for me. not good!
I wonder what would it take to change the right persons mind about the cannabis. with help i do believe i could be an employee again! i love to work and am not able to!
life at the moment sucks!
68
 
This mood boost seems to be the result of the drug's ability to promote the growth of new brain cells, something no other addictive drug appears able to do, the researchers say.


Um I wouldn't count marijuana as an addictive drug, and that isn't true anyway because I have read other articles about this stuff that found certain types of anti-depression drugs promoted brain cell growth in the same way as THC
 
hemp is not addictive like heroin but it can be..
I smoke over 10 years now and i can ensure you that i am totally unable to quit it even for 10 days in a row. Even though i would love to STOP using it for a while.
When i used heroin, i quit it very easy after a month(the results of usage where imidiately odvious and of course not welcome), with acid and mdma, i quit after 5 months (until today i still dislike those drugs).
But with mj is different. Is true love. I smoke the first 10' after i wake up and i stop after 16 hours of continius smoking, only to sleep. I am stoned even during serious working time. I am addicted people. If it was just matter of stupidity, i would be also addicted to other(non-addictive) stuff. But my 2 addiction are MJ and coffee. Coffee is 100% addictive and fuck it.
MJ can cause strong psychological addiction, if the person smokes a lot during certain periods of his/her life. (for ex., stressfull periods)
 
As a life long (nearly) and daily user (except when I'm out) I would say Cannabis is not addictive. The only symptoms I experience when out of it is a strong wish that I wasn't out of it. I don't even get grumpy. I do have increased pain since I use it medicinally to treat pain. I think addiction to Cannabis is in the 'mind' of the individual user.
 
other constriction symptomes i notice when i am out are:
increased nervous mood. I get mad with silly things that usually i dont care so much.
decreased apetite,
decreased optimism

I think you are right, all the addiction is in the mind and not in the body.
Nevertheless, week minds(or personalities) tend to act as addicted when they get used to it and suddenly have to quit because "stass emptied and there is nothing out there".

I dont have so many problems because of smoking(yet) but i can see friends of mine that are totaly unhealthy and still being unable to quit for 6 months or something to recover. I see that, like me, they would like to have the strength to quit for a while but "something" keeps them smoking. Maybe this is what i interpret as addiction.:tokin:
 
Honestly I don't think everyone should use Cannabis. Some people use it too much. Some, not enough.

As far as symptoms that arise when stopping Cannabis use its sorta like the 'chicken or the egg', at least for me. I feel more anxious or maybe depressed when I don't have it but I've also been diagnosed bi-polar. So I feel like its not the lack of Cannabis causing those symptoms but the lack of Cannabis that allows those pre-existing conditions to come to the surface. If you aren't taking your meds thats what happens.

I was using Cannabis for many years and thought I was just a stoner, and yes that was part of it, but at the same time I was self-medicating and didn't even realize it. Only in the last few years as I've learned about the medical properties of Cannabis and been able to take a long look back at my life have I seen whats really been happening. Without going into my background here, I honestly feel that Cannabis has saved my life. I do go into all of that here.
 
Honestly I don't think everyone should use Cannabis. Some people use it too much. Some, not enough.

As far as symptoms that arise when stopping Cannabis use its sorta like the 'chicken or the egg', at least for me. I feel more anxious or maybe depressed when I don't have it but I've also been diagnosed bi-polar. So I feel like its not the lack of Cannabis causing those symptoms but the lack of Cannabis that allows those pre-existing conditions to come to the surface. If you aren't taking your meds thats what happens.

I was using Cannabis for many years and thought I was just a stoner, and yes that was part of it, but at the same time I was self-medicating and didn't even realize it. Only in the last few years as I've learned about the medical properties of Cannabis and been able to take a long look back at my life have I seen whats really been happening. Without going into my background here, I honestly feel that Cannabis has saved my life. I do go into all of that here.

Hey that was a good read, although I laughed out loud about being "born at a young age" :p

Yeah I don't think marijuana is physically addictive for virtually everyone, but that it can be psychologically addictive to some, and habit forming for many. For me its habit forming, but I only take it at night as medication for my getting to sleep issues and what comes of that (it always takes me 2 hours to fall asleep which gets really depressing and makes me anxious, with marijuana it takes me 1/2 an hour or so.
 
Um I wouldn't count marijuana as an addictive drug, and that isn't true anyway because I have read other articles about this stuff that found certain types of anti-depression drugs promoted brain cell growth in the same way as THC

This is one of those sentences...

If read one way, the only way that corresponds to reality rather than the author's ignorance or malfeasance, then it must mean that there "are no other drugs which, if they are addictive, could lead also to this same result", but anyone can see that this sentence is only possible to read this way if you already KNOW that marijuana is not addictive. Besides, it is a plant, not a drug. If the synthesized substance were the reference, then it is a drug if used for its medicinal value, and I take "medicine" in a VERY broad sense, as it SHOULD be taken.

This sort of sentence just reveals the incompetence, stupidity, ignorance, and malignity of people working under the aegis of big pharma. Rats in labcoats.
 
But then I go further down, and I know that it is simply this same psychopathic ignorance...

Among the common addictive drugs, marijuana alone appears able to promote neurogenesis when used over time and in the right dosage, the researchers say. In contrast, prior research has demonstrated that chronic administration of cocaine, opiates, alcohol and nicotine inhibits brain cell growth.

These assholes need to be put out of our misery.
 
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