Will Marijuana Help My Fibromyalgia Symptoms?

Katelyn Baker

Well-Known Member
Many who suffer from fibromyalgia come from a generation or worldview that criticizes and forbids the use of marijuana, even for medicinal purposes. However, cannabis (Latin name for the marijuana) has been used as a medicine for at least 5,000 years of recorded history. Interestingly enough, among a variety of ailments and conditions, cannabis was also used to treat pain, inflammation, poor memory, migraines, fatigue, depression, and rheumatism. Sound familiar, fibro sufferers? It has been smoked, eaten, and made into teas and pastes in the medical life of India and China for thousands of years. It was introduced to the U.S. around the turn of the 20th Century by Mexican immigrants. But racism and classism led to the criminalization of marijuana.

Is there any modern proof marijuana works?

Studying the medical benefits of cannabis is largely responsible for the legalization of it. While it has been used in the past as an actual cure for certain conditions, there is no evidence to show that it will specifically cure fibromyalgia. However, there is substantial evidence to show that marijuana can radically improve fibro symptoms ranging from pain and muscle stiffness to insomnia and mood. In fact, fibromyalgia has been linked to an endocannabinoid deficiency that can be treated with cannabinoid medicines.

Furthermore, oncologist and director of clinical research programs at the Osher Center for Integrative Medicine at the UCSF School of Medicine in San Francisco, Donald I. Abrams, M.D., published a related study in The Journal of Neurology. It included a "randomized placebo-controlled clinical trial that demonstrated that smoked cannabis was effective in this situation," says Abrams. "The people who say there's no evidence that smoked marijuana has any medicinal benefits really can't say that anymore. The drug was quite comparable to the best available treatment we currently have for painful peripheral neuropathy" (painful, damaged nerves). For many fibro patients, painful and damaged nerves are the cornerstone of this debilitating condition. Thus, more and more suffering from fibromyalgia are turning to marijuana in various forms as a way to mitigate the incapacitating and weakening effects. And it's not just young people who are using it, but the ages span across the board.

For example, CNN reported on the use of marijuana for fibromyalgia, beginning with Lynda, a middle-aged mother of three in New York: "I would use [marijuana] when the burning pains started down my spine or my right arm, and shortly after, I found I could continue with housework and actually get more done." It went on to report that since only 35-40% of fibro patients get relief from prescription medications, some turn to marijuana. If you live in a location where it is legal, you have probably noticed dispensaries popping up all over the place. It may be difficult to determine where to begin, but you may wish to start with a list of top medical marijuana physicians and institutions in the United States, including a few around the world such as Spain, Israel, and Canada for our international readers.

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News Moderator: Katelyn Baker 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: Will Marijuana Help My Fibromyalgia Symptoms?
Author: Tiffany Vance-Huffman
Contact: Fibromyalgia Treating
Photo Credit: Teri Virbickis
Website: Fibromyalgia Treating
 
Hi Katelyn,

Where would one find "list of top medical marijuana physicians and institutions in the United States?"

I am kidney transplant patient (6 months) with fibro and would love to know if any doctors have experience with both? Specifically interactions with immunosuppressants (tacrolimus) and CBD. I recently started cannbis CBD only edibles and my tacro levels jumped to 20 after being steady for some time. Only new "drug" was CBD. I live in California where cannabis is legal.

Thanks.
 
I would be careful but begin with small doese of thc then check levels as you go. I have a pinched nerve in my cervical spine. I started smoking a little every night for the relief from insomnia and irritable bowel symptoms. To my surprise the tingling and burning sensations in my left arm dissapeared as did my gastric reflux. I was able to get off gabapentin for my neck and nerve pain, off omeprozole, and ibuprofen. I now sleep on my preferred side ( my right) occassionally if i dont smoke enough my right shoulder wakes me up because bursitus from an old injury. If i get good and stoned on my kush blend, i can sleep all night with no grogginess like i got from gabapentin. My mood the following day is better also. I get some irritation from the smoke, my xurrent weed is harsh dispensary weed. Other wise it is atotal GodSend.
 
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