POLITICIANS URGING ANTI-MARIJUANA POLICIES ARE FACING INCREASED PUBLIC SCRUTINY

Politicians and cannabis have had a rocky relationship at best. While there have been legislators who have fought hard to promote the valued medicinal properties of cannabis, there are far more politicians in Washington and around the country who to this day continue to release inaccurate information. Recently, the Chris Christie-led Presidential Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis released it’s findings about medical marijuana’s role in treating those addicted to opioids.

CHRIS CHRISTIE CONTINUES TO PUSH ANTI-MARIJUANA POLICIES

christie opposes new marijuana policies
New Jersey Governor And Head Of Presidential Opioid Commission Chris Christie

The commission of which Chris Christie is the chair believes that the legalization of cannabis would lead to addiction amongst users of cannabis products. In their argument, they reference the opioid addiction boom in the early 2000’s. In the report released days ago, Christie stated that, “there is a lack of sophisticated outcome data on dose, potency and abuse potential for marijuana.” Christie went on, “the Commission urges that the same mistake is not made with the uninformed rush to put another drug legally on the market in the midst of an overdose epidemic.”

In Christie’s remarks, no mention was made of the mounting evidence suggesting medical marijuana legalization is one way to help treat the opioid crisis affecting America. Evidence suggests that medical cannabis legalization lowers opioid hospitalization rates by nearly 25% and opioid overdoses by 13%.

The only actual statistic related to cannabis consumption that Christie addresses is the National Institute of Health’s claim that cannabis users are twice as likely to become addicted than non-users. This was a small scale study and did not take into account the differences between those who use cannabis recreationally and medically.

Christie and his commission worked hard to avoid mention of any evidence suggesting cannabis is an effective alternative to traditional medical treatments. In an effort to counteract the clear denial of facts by some politicians, those who do use medical cannabis to treat opioid addiction or other serious conditions will continue to make their voices heard publicly.

12 YEAR OLD WITH EPILEPSY SUES ATTORNEY GENERAL JEFF SESSIONS

12 year old sues over marijuana policies
12 Year Old Alexis Bortell

In an effort to fight anti-cannabis propaganda, 12 year old Alexis Bortell has filed a lawsuit against Jeff Sessions claiming the federal prohibition of cannabis is unconstitutional. Bortell has epilepsy and uses a specific high THC strain of cannabis to treat the unpredictable seizures brought upon by the condition. Bortell and her family moved to Colorado from Texas in order to gain access to the medicine she so desperately needs. There were few traditional treatment options that worked for Bortell, and as she says, using cannabis “is a lot better than brain surgery.” She wants cannabis to be legalized federally so that she can return to Texas to visit family. Currently, Bortell cannot make the trip with her medicine as cannabis is illegal in Texas. Bortell’s attorney called cannabis’ inclusion in the Controlled Substances Act both “unconstitutional and irrational.”

CONVERSATION ABOUT MARIJUANA POLICIES IN UNITED STATES IS RAMPING UP

Bortell was joined by a military veteran, a marijuana advocacy group and ex-Denver Broncos player Marvin Washington, KDVR reports. While the lawsuit will generate a national conversation about the illegality of cannabis, it is unlikely that it will have any legislative impact.

Whether it be politicians discussing its suitability as a treatment option or children suing the federal government to gain access to it, the dialogue surrounding cannabis is garnering more attention nationally. 62% of Americans have access to cannabis in some way, shape, or form. Yet many, like Alexis Bortell, still need legal access to cannabis nationally.

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FIRST NORTHWEST FLORIDA MEDICAL MARIJUANA PATIENT HAS AMAZING RESULTS AFTER USING MARIJUANA FOR DRAVET SYNDROME

J.J. Sampley was the first person in Northwest Florida to receive legally grown, state-manufactured medical marijuana.

 

 

For the first time in his son’s short life, J.J’s father Jonathan has hope J.J. will one day speak to him.

“He’s been doing really good. He’s smiling and he seems more aware of his surroundings. He’s paying attention, looking at you. He’s coming around really well,” Sampley said. “He’ll look at you right in your face like he wants to say something. He’s not yet talking, but you can tell he wants to say something.

J.J’S JOURNEY

In the short time that medical marijuana has been legal J.J. has already experienced positive changes- directly attributed to medical marijuana. J.J. has shown signs that his brain is repairing, he’s suffered from Dravet Syndrome since infancy. Devastating seizure activity that occurred during that time is finally beginning to heal. Sampley recently saw his son cry for the first time since he was born. He tears up himself when he recalls the event.

“He feels no pain with the Dravet syndrome, and he never cries,” Sampley said. “Then he started crying. Just to hear him cry was pretty amazing. It freaked me out, but I loved it.”

At one time in his young life, J.J. was taking six to seven pharmacuticals a day to control his seizures.
He takes a single pharmaceutical several times daily and ingests 0.6 milliliter, of cannabis twice daily.

Sampley says his son’s seizure activity has been reduced by about 60 percent, and when he does suffer seizures his recovery time is much improved.

“Before when he had a seizure he’d be laid out for two or three days. Now he has one and in a couple of hours he’s up and going again,” he said. “I notice a difference in awareness, and what I guess you can say is going on with his brain,” Sampley said. “Before, he was out of it. He wouldn’t smile or want to play or do anything.”

At the same time, J.J. has discovered fear. He’s more tentative now walking up and down stairs.
“He’s learning to be unsure and afraid. He used to not be that,” Sampley said. “That’s all in the repair process. His brain is fixing itself.”

After watching his son’s amazing progress, Jonathan hopes lawmakers will loosen rules regarding the distribution of cannabis. That would allow for out-of-state companies to compete for business.

 

“I feel like we need more options. We need people who have the best product and production down to a science,” he said. “We can’t keep those people out just because they didn’t get their name pulled out of a hat in a lottery.”

 

CHARLOTTE’S WEB AND DRAVET SYNDROME

Charlotte’s Web is one of the most well-known cannabis strains. It has been used to treat Dravet Syndrom with an amazing success rate. The story of Charlotte Figi, who has Dravet syndrome, helped introduce people to the idea that cannabis is medicine. That can be non-psychoactive and reduce the number of seizures in people who suffer from Dravet syndrome.

“(The Florida distributor) is great. I just don’t think their science is as advanced as the Stanley brothers,” Sampley said. “They’ve been growing it for years. There’s a science to that. Charlotte’s Web is fixing J.J’s brain.”
Charlotte’s web is unique because of how the Stanley brother produce their product, they’ve managed to make a consistent blend in their cannabis by cloning a single marijuana plant.

“One hundred thousand times the same plant is going into the ground. It’s the only way to control consistency,” he said.

 

https://medicalmarijuana411.com/patient-story-j-j-samply/?utm_source=newsletter110917&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=dailydose&utm_content=readmore

PATIENT STORY – DAUGHTER STARTS MEDICAL MARIJUANA COLLECTIVE AFTER MOTHERS PASSING

PATIENT STORY- MYRIAM PEÑA

MYRIAM PEÑA

 

Daughter Starts Medical Marijuana Collective After Mothers Passing- Diana Peña became an advocate for medical marijuana after her mother had a better quality of life, she outlived life expectancy expectations by over a year, with a better quality of life.

 

 

 

FROM DIANA PEÑA
On January 14, 2013 our mother, Myriam, was diagnosed with Stage IV Glioblastoma brain cancer, one of the most aggressive forms of brain cancer.

It was a devastating diagnosis to say the least, but in the midst of desperation came determination and hope. We had been encouraged by mom’s holistic doctor to seek out information on Cannabis Oil, so we searched and discovered information on how to make and dose Cannabis Oil ourselves. From the moment we got her started on the Cannabis Oil, our mom immediately started getting better; MRI’s have all shown tumor shrinkage, blood count test have all come back with favorable results, etc. We became very involved in Social Media during the healing journey and sharing our mom’s story has brought us to connect with many other patients with not only brain cancer but other cancers and ailments which can only be treated with costly pharmaceuticals that can cause sever side-effects or with Cannabis.

MEDICAL MARIJUANA AND HOSPICE TREATMENT

Doctors had given Myriam a prognosis of three months to live, and there was “not a whole lot they could do” except extend her life a bit. With cannabis oil as a staple in her mom’s treatment plan, Peña said her mom outlived expectations by over a year, with a better quality of life.

It’s common for patients on chemotherapy to find that marijuana suppresses their nausea and improves their appetite. Some patients with severe pain use cannabis as an alternative to opioids and their undesirable side effects.

As with most things involving medical marijuana, good data is hard to come by. But a January study in the journal Gerontologist found that cannabis “may be an effective substitute for prescription opioids and other misused medications;” as well as “an alternative for the undertreatment of pain at the end of life.”

PEÑA’S WORK FOR PATIENTS

In some hospice facilities, patients “have to either hide it or go home,” Peña said, especially those organizations scared of losing federal funds. “I’ve talked to other patients where the nurses are OK with it.” Some nurses, she said, will even administer it.

From Piña – Because of our mom’s journey and the vast knowledge we’ve gained during her healing journey, we decided we wanted to change this, and we decided to establish Myriam’s Hope, as we just couldn’t sit back and watch as others are suffering knowing there is something so pure and natural that can help for so many diseases. We would like to welcome you to an alternative treatment therapy and provide you with a safe haven to access this amazing medicinal extract we simply call Cannabis Oil. Please join us and help us help you.

With more than half the states endorsing marijuana’s value as a medicine for patients with terminal illnesses, Peña said it “has to be a closed-minded doctor who doesn’t want to see this is helpful for patients.”

 

 

https://medicalmarijuana411.com/daughter-starts-medical-marijuana-collective-mothers-passing/?utm_source=newsletter093017&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=dailydose&utm_content=readmore

RESEARCH SUGGESTS CANNABIS MAY BE EFFECTIVE AT LIMITING THE EFFECTS OF PARKINSON’S DISEASE

SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH SHOWS EFFECTIVE USE  OF CANNABIS FOR PARKINSON’S DISEASE TREATMENT

Much about Parkinson’s Disease remains unclear. Nobody knows the true cause of the disease and scientists are still searching for a cure. What  we do know is that Parkinson’s is a degenerative condition that depletes dopamine centers within the brain.

The loss of dopamine causes these common symptoms: body tremors, muscle spasms, loss of balance, insomnia, memory loss and dementia. What is most frightening about Parkinson’s Disease is the fact that it is progressive. What may start out as the occasional finger twitch can lead to the inability to freely move certain muscles. These symptoms of Parkinson’s makes  it extremely difficult to accomplish daily tasks.

The root causes of Parkinson’s Disease are unknown and current medications only dull its symptoms.Over time, many patients build up a tolerance to these treatments , which cause their symptoms to eventually return. Some Parkinson’s patients are now finding relief through medical cannabis treatments.

 

Recent research has shown positive results when utilizing cannabis for Parkinson’s Disease treatment.

 

Recent scientific research into how Parkinson’s affects our neurological structure has uncovered how the disease attacks the dopamine centers within the basal ganglia. The basal ganglia helps control muscle mobility and is one of the key regions in the brain that Parkinson’s attacks. The basal ganglia has a surprisingly high amount of endocannabinoid receptors that consist mostly of CB1 receptors; the receptors where endogenous THC is activated when it reaches the brain.

Cannabis’ ability to be a neuroprotector has been discussed and researched for decades. A study conducted nearly twenty years ago researched whether or not cannabis had neuroprotective qualities. Researchers injected rats with a neurotoxic chemical that typically severely decays the brain. When given cannabis extracts, the rat’s brains were protected from the chemical. The groundbreaking study proved that cannabis has inherent neuroprotective qualities.

CANNABIS IS A RELIABLE NEUROPROTECTANT

A reliable neuroprotectant that could treat Parkinson’s would be very welcome. While the research proving cannabis is a reliable neuroprotectant is promising, it is scarce. There is not enough cannabis research to prove definitively that cannabis can effectively treat Parkinson’s disease, but the anecdotal evidence is overwhelming.

According to multiple firsthand accounts, patients can find relief by using medical cannabis. In states where medical marijuana is legal, those with Parkinson’s have began exploring alternate treatments with medical cannabis. As more states continue to legalize marijuana use, more patients will have the ability to discover the medicinal qualities of cannabis for Parkinson’s disease.

THE IMPACT ON PARKINSON’S BY MEDICAL MARIJUANA

Katerina Venderova

Katerina Venderova  from  Movement Disorders Journal conducted a survey of Parkinson’s disease patients using medial cannabis and reported that “39 patients (45.9%) described mild or substantial alleviation of their PD symptoms in general, 26 (30.6%) showed improvement of rest tremor, 38 (44.7%) had improvement in bradykinesia, 32 (37.7%) had alleviation of muscle rigidity, and 12 (14.1%) had improvement of L-dopa-induced dyskinesias. Only 4 patients in this survey (4.7%) reported that cannabis actually worsened their symptoms.

 

“Patients using cannabis for at least 3 months reported significantly more alleviation of their Parkinson’s disease symptoms in general.”

 

 

David, who has Parkinson’s disease, has been using medical marijuana to help improve his quality of life.

 FORMER POLICE CAPTAIN HAS AMAZING RESULTS WITH MEDICAL MARIJUANA

From Ride with Larry – Patient Story- Larry doesn’t just live with Parkinson’s, He rises above it. After a 20-year battle with Parkinson’s, Larry has exhausted every conventional method of treatment, every drug, and even brain surgery. Refusing to give up, he seeks alternatives, discovering the untapped benefits of exercise and medical marijuana. Now Larry will attempt the unthinkable, a 300-mile bike ride across South Dakota, a journey of hope for anyone facing a life altering illness. In this intimate portrait of courage, love, and community, Larry Smith refuses to give up, proving that if you love life, you’ll fight for it.

This clip is from the feature documentary “Ride with Larry.” With his Parkinson’s symptoms worsening and options for new medications unavailable, retired police captain Larry S. is getting tested for his medical marijuana card. The final results in Part 3 show, unedited, the effect of cannabis on his Parkinson’s tremor, dyskinesia, and voice.

FIRST DISPENSARY VISIT

This clip is from the feature documentary “Ride with Larry” and shows retired police captain Larry going through the process to purchase medical marijuana for the first time.

RESULTS

See the effects of cannabis first hand, unedited, on Parkinson’s tremor dyskinesia, and voice.

This clip is from the feature documentary “Ride with Larry” and shows retired police captain Larry trying medical marijuana for the first time.

 

 

 

 

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‘GRANDMA’S MAGIC REMEDY:’ MEXICO’S MEDICAL MARIJUANA SECRET

Mexico City (AFP) – When her legs ache, this Mexican grandmother rubs them with marijuana-infused alcohol. She is well aware the homemade remedy defies the country’s cannabis ban, but her family has used the concoction to treat ailments since she was a child, handing it down the generations.

 

“I really have a lot of faith in it,” said the slender 53-year-old, a housewife and amateur dancer about her cannabis use on condition of strict anonymity.

“When I’m very tired, I spread it on my legs, feet and body. It’s really good. I can go without salt but not without marijuana with alcohol. My grandmother used it,” she said, holding a plastic bottle filled with the leaves and liquid.

In turn, she used the family remedy to care for her three children, and three grandchildren. For the kids, a piece of cotton soaked in the liquid is placed in the bellybutton to fight fevers. When they’re congested, the alcohol is rubbed on the chest and back.

A debate on whether to legalize marijuana for recreational or medicinal uses in Mexico is in its infant stages, but Mexicans have used cannabis for therapeutic purposes for centuries.

The national discussion was launched in November when the Supreme Court issued a landmark ruling authorizing four people to grow and smoke marijuana for personal use, opening the door for others to seek similar permits.

A woman applies a mixture of alcohol and marijuana to relieve muscle aches at a clandestine greenhouse in Mexico City 

 

Weeks earlier, the parents of an eight-year-old girl named Grace, who suffers from a severe form of epilepsy, won a legal battle to import a cannabis-based oil to treat her condition.

But for generations Mexicans have been using “grandma’s magic remedy” to combat a wide range of pains, fevers or other complaints.

The cannabis-infused oil can be kept for months, and many keep a flask hidden in a closet. The remedy also comes in dry forms or as pastes. Some drink marijuana tea to relieve headaches or help with insomnia while others smoke it to fight nausea or cancer-related pains.

“Infused into alcohol is the traditional use for rheumatism as well as muscular and circulation pains,” said Humberto Rocca, a doctor specializing in addictions and herbalism.

“It’s an ancient medicine, passed on from generation to generation. Young people know that their grandmothers or mothers use it,” Rocca said.


A debate on whether to legalize marijuana for recreational or medicinal uses in Mexico is in its infant stages, but Mexicans have used cannabis for therapeutic purposes for centuries
Jorge Hernandez Tinajero, a veteran pot legalization activist, said Spanish conquistadors brought hemp with them, and indigenous populations added it to their ceremonial and medicinal traditions.

“Marijuana began to be used in different ways in the 16th century, for rituals guided by shamans, which persist to this day in some villages,” said Tinajero, who is part of the Mexican Association of Cannabis Studies.

In a Mexico City home, a 33-year-old publicist agreed to show AFP reporters his hydroponic system of some 20 marijuana plants growing under intense spotlights.

“This is for personal and medical use,” he said from his greenhouse, walking barefoot and smoking a joint during the chat.


While President Enrique Pena Nieto has voiced opposition to legalizing marijuana, he has convened experts to hold debates between January and March to see if the government should change the law in the wake of the Supreme Court ruling
“There’s no sale or purchases. We only do this to change the system and this war” against drug trafficking, he said, echoing the argument among pro-legalization activists that decriminalizing pot will help combat the violence associated with the illegal trade.

He taught himself to make various types of therapeutic marijuana, including the traditional alcohol-based recipe, a thick wax concentrate of tetrahydrocannabinol — the main psychoactive ingredient in cannabis — which is used to treat nausea, and extracts that are used for vaporizations.

“If your mom has a migraine, you give her a little tea because the pain goes away with a little bit of marijuana,” he said.

“Typically I make alcohol for the grandmother of a friend who has pains in the hands or feet due to arthritis or sciatica,” said the man, who insists he gives away the medicine for free.

– National debate –

While President Enrique Pena Nieto has voiced opposition to legalizing marijuana, he has convened experts to hold debates between January and March to see if the government should change the law in the wake of the Supreme Court ruling.

In its wake, Mexican health authorities this week issued the first permit allowing the individuals concerned to grow their own marijuana for recreational purposes.

Though limited to those four people only, the authorization opens a crack in Mexico’s prohibitionist policies.

In parallel, a member of Pena Nieto’s Institutional Revolutionary Party has introduced a bill in the Senate that would allow Mexicans to import and consume medical marijuana — though not grow it on national soil.

But the head of the government’s Cofepris health and drug regulator, Mikel Arriola, doubts the medicinal value of marijuana.

“For it to have healing effects, it must be presented in a medicine form, like a tablet, an injection or a solution,” Arriola told AFP. “Marijuana does not go through this process. Its healing effects are not recognized.”

A spokesman for the attorney general’s office said that carrying marijuana-infused alcohol is illegal. But he also said there was no precedent of anyone being arrested for using the home brew.

https://medicalmarijuana411.com/grandmas-magic-remedy-mexicos-medical-marijuana-secret/?utm_source=newsletter080317&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=dailydose&utm_content=readmore

WHOLE PLANT THERAPY RESTORES A LIFE

By Mary Lou Smart

Debbie Wilson was disabled 22 years ago when the 16-year-old driver of a pick-up truck knocked her down and backed over her at a Kentucky Fried Chicken.

He was driving the wrong way, against the arrows, as he left the restaurant. The tail end of his truck clipped her jaw, knocking out her teeth and throwing her to the ground, head first.

The injury dramatically altered her life.

Prior to becoming disabled, Wilson enjoyed a career in law enforcement as a felony probation and parole officer for the state of Florida, and was also in her second year of law school.

She had grown up and trained in Tampa, where her father was a supervisor of federal probation and parole officers and her mother was a U.S. marshal.

Her husband, who is now deceased, was a county deputy sheriff. In a split second, the swipe of a pick-up truck dramatically changed her life.

She could no longer hold her 3-year-old son. She became reliant on others.

For two decades following the accident, she wore a helmet from the time she woke up until the time she went to sleep. She suffered from migraine headaches and uncontrolled seizures, including several grand mal seizures every week and daily partial cluster seizures lasting for hours.

Seven years ago, a loss of balance led to a repeat head injury that did more damage to her brain and exasperated her seizures. She learned to walk, talk and tie her shoes for the third time in her life.

Nothing was under control. Her neurologist admitted to her that she was one of up to 30 percent of seizure patients whose seizures cannot be controlled by conventional medications.

Ten years ago her large intestine was removed, leaving her with constant irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), and necessitating diapers. Dehydration from diarrhea all day every day regularly caused her potassium level to plummet, resulting in several hospitalizations a year to stabilize life-threatening hypokalemia.

Wilson ’s pharmaceutical regimen was considerable.

Pain meds for migraines; high doses of central nervous system depressants for non-stop seizures; eight Lemotil, a Pfizer pharmaceutical intended for short-term use, daily for years for IBS; and antidepressants to deal with a life spent taking pills.

The pain medications to control the post traumatic headaches were ineffective, possibly because of the seizure medications she was taking.

“I was opiate resistant, and I think that’s because I was taking so many anti-epileptic drugs in such massive proportions,” she said. “At one point I was taking 400 milligrams of Phenobarbital a day. My doctor told me that it was enough to put two men comatose.”

Wilson has been under the care of doctors specializing in high-risk patients for years, and has been told that she’s one of the worst seizure patients they’ve ever seen.

She’s been turned down for seizure studies because her condition is so precarious. While trying to stabilize the seizures, doctors occasionally poisoned her with too many seizure medications.

Charcoaling with a substance that binds to drugs and prevents them from being absorbed into the bloodstream is one method of dealing with drug overdoses. She estimates that she’s been charcoaled 30 times in the past two decades.

She developed type 2 diabetes five years ago, and began taking medication for that.

Constant anxiety from spiraling health contributed to a diagnosis of post traumatic stress syndrome.

Throughout it all, Wilson , 57, advocated for others in similar predicaments.

“The most hopeless group of people I’ve ever met are not in wheelchairs,” she said. “They are people with traumatic brain injuries, and that’s no lie. We are given no hope. I can’t tell you how many doctors wrote me off as just not worth it. This goes to show you that doctors can be wrong.”

Fifteen years ago she started a website to write about traumatic brain injury. That site, domiciled in England , has had over 8 million hits. A Google search of TBI + Debbie Wilson leads to her story, poems and prose about living with a brain injury.

Through her writing, she’s tried to help a wide range of people, from infants to war veterans, that suffer from serious head injuries. Physicians and lawyers specializing in traumatic brain injury, and even the manufacturer of the wheelchair she uses, feature her poetry on their websites.

One year ago, she went to Chicago for out-patient treatment for her migraines, which were getting worse. Head trauma patients often suffer from chronic headaches, and chronic pain is also known to cause changes in the nervous system that can worsen over time.

The physician she visited insisted on admitting her for a 14-day treatment, but his hospital would not take Medicaid. Her insurance did not cover in-patient care. With only Medicare being accepted, a daily out-of-pocket expense of $500 would have been beyond her reach. She could not afford the treatment that she needed.

On the train ride back home, she decided that she needed to take her life back. Having head aches and seizures non-stop while taking multiple medications was bad enough, but wearing a helmet and diapers all day was pure hell. She thought about it for several days before asking a friend to buy her some marijuana.

For a former law enforcement professional who had never smoked marijuana, the decision was not an easy one.

“I’d come from the other side of the law,” she said. “The way I had been raised, I would never have considered crossing the line and doing something illegal. I had never experimented recreationally.”

“First of all, it helped my headaches, and then after a few weeks I started noticing that I wasn’t having diarrhea any more,” she said. “When it helped the seizures, that was just the icing on the cake.”

With cannabis, her chronic migraines were immediately relieved. Her uncontrolled cluster partial complex seizures, which previously would have continued for hours, could now be stopped quickly and without hospitalization. Even her diabetes improved.

When her blood sugar level stabilized, she stopped taking diabetes medication.

Prior to cannabis, she’d been told by her doctor that the brain injury caused her brain to stop producing serotonin, which is why she needed antidepressants. When she began feeling better all over, she went off of the antidepressants.

“It really was the miracle cure. I went from 40 pills a day to none, and after 13 years of never being able to watch my grandchildren on my own, I finally can because of cannabis.”

“The secret is the CBD-rich tinctures, but where I live there is no medical system for me to get it so I’m always worried. It would be nice to be able to move, or have my state allow for medical marijuana.”

Now that she is saving taxpayers $4,000 each month by not taking her prescription pills, she is still unable to work, but only because this Phd would fail a drug test, and not because of any disability anymore.

“Sadly, the same thing that allows me to have a better quality of life now and gives me the strength and ability to be a productive member in society is the same thing that makes me fail a drug test.”

“As a former probation officer, I know how they think, and it’s still black and white to the black and blue. They just don’t know any better.”

 

 

 

Mary Lou Smart is a freelance writer based on the East Coast. She maintains her website, Medical Cannabis Art and has many of her articles and artwork available for your own publications. With more than 20 years as a journalist, Ms. Smart has the experience and expertise to help shape the stories she writes with a solid understanding in this complicated plant science.

 

https://medicalmarijuana411.com/whole-plant-therapy-restores-a-life-2/?utm_source=newsletter080117&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=dailydose&utm_content=readmore

“SHONA BANDA SAVED MY LIFE”

“Shona Banda Saved My Life”

The following is a personal story from a woman who suffers from Crohn’s disease and suffers much less thanks to medical cannabis, and Shona Banda…

To Medical Marijuana 411, i would first like to say that Shona Banda
saved my life…
I am a 26 year old living in NH and I’ve had Crohn’s Disease for 10 years now. I have been on all the medications that a normal doctor would prescribe for a CD patient, I’ve been on Remicade, chemo twice – once when I was 18 then again this last year.

Remicade made me violently sick and i was searching for a way to not have to stay on it, but i just couldn’t figure it out.

Last summer I learned about the MAP infection theory in Crohn’s and started taking probiotics and other natural remedies, but they never took the problem away, it was just like smoking marijuana, it eased the symptoms, but nothing was really fixed.

One day in april, my sister called me and told me about Shona’s video online and I had to check it out.

I got home and watched her video and did a little research and realized I had to do this.

I had just gone to my doctor, frustrated and upset about the condition I was in, throwing up, well more like dry heaving because I had no appetite, so I barely was eating, and horrible persistent stomach pains in the 2-3 weeks leading up to my next Remicade infusion.

Remicade is administered every 6-8 weeks in a chemo ward. My doctor’s solution was double the dose and get it every six weeks instead of eight.

I was thrilled, actually not really, I was devastated because I knew Remicade has a half life of 30 years! and thats a lot of toxic chemicals they were pumping in to me, but I could think of no other solution, until Shona’s video.

I was an avid smoker for many years to help relieve my symptoms, and it was the only thing i could do besides resorting to narcotics, which thankfully i never did, to relieve my pain and stimulate my appetite. I immediately purchased a vaporizer online and started making my own oil.

I was supposed to have a Remicade infusion on April 25th, I never showed up, I had started my oil regimine just days before that. I have been on oil ever since and found it relieved my nausea almost instantly in a way that smoking could not.

Slowly my days started getting better, and my nights too!

I tell people that before the oil I was running on 40% efficiency, now I am at 90% efficiency and I can’t believe the drastic turnaround I have had.

I still struggle with symptoms of my Crohns as i can only make a little at a time, but baby steps are better than no steps at all!

I live with my sister who does not smoke marijuana and was very skeptical of what I was trying to do, and she is very vocal to me now about how amazing she thinks that I am doing, she can hear my health in the way that I walk, is what she says, I used to struggle to get up and down the stairs, and she could hear me, now, they are just stairs, not an obstacle to my room.

I have thanked Shona for letting the world know this simple and affordable way to heal yourself and I am forever indebted to her. thank you for supporting her and

I look forward to being a member of medical marijuana 411, thank you for spreading truth and kindness to the sick, tired, and hurting people of the world!
– Patient Submitted Story

https://medicalmarijuana411.com/shona-banda-saved-my-life/?utm_source=newsletter062017&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=dailydose&utm_content=readmore

Marijuana stops child’s severe seizures

The Story of Charlotte Figi

By most standards Matt and Paige Figi were living the American dream. They met at Colorado State University, where they shared a love of the outdoors. After getting married, the couple bought a house and planned to travel the world. They did travel, but their plans changed when their first child was born in 2004.

Max was 2 when they decided to have another child. The couple got the surprise of their lives when an ultrasound revealed not one but two babies. Charlotte and Chase were born October 18, 2006. “They were born at 40 weeks. … Charlotte weighed 7 pounds, 12 ounces,” Paige said. “They were healthy. Everything was normal.”

Seizures and hospital stays begin

The twins were 3 months old when the Figis’ lives changed forever. Charlotte had just had a bath, and Matt was putting on her diaper. “She was laying on her back on the floor,” he said, “and her eyes just started flickering.” The seizure lasted about 30 minutes. Her parents rushed her to the hospital. “They weren’t calling it epilepsy,” Paige said. “We just thought it was one random seizure. They did a million-dollar work-up — the MRI, EEG, spinal tap — they did the whole work-up and found nothing. And sent us home.”

A week later, Charlotte had another seizure. This one was longer, and it was only the beginning. Over the next few months, Charlotte — affectionately called Charlie — had frequent seizures lasting two to four hours, and she was hospitalized repeatedly. Doctors were stumped. Her blood tests were normal. Her scans were all normal.

They said it’s probably going to go away. It is unusual in that it’s so severe, but it’s probably something she’ll grow out of. – Paige Figi

 

But she didn’t grow out of it. The seizures continued. The hospital stays got longer. One of the doctors treating Charlotte thought there were three possible diagnoses.

The worse-case scenario? Dravet Syndrome, also known as myoclonic epilepsy of infancy or SMEI.

Dravet Syndrome is a rare, severe form of intractable epilepsy. Intractable means the seizures are not controlled by medication. The first seizures with Dravet Syndrome usually start before the age of 1. In the second year, other seizures take hold: myoclonus, or involuntary, muscle spasms and status epilepticus, seizures that last more than 30 minutes or come in clusters, one after the other.

At that time, the Figis said, Charlotte was still developing normally, talking and walking the same day as her twin. But the seizures continued to get worse. The medications were also taking a toll. She was on seven drugs — some of them heavy-duty, addictive ones such as barbiturates and benzodiazepines. They’d work for a while, but the seizures always came back with a vengeance.

“At 2, she really started to decline cognitively,” Paige said. “Whether it was the medicines or the seizures, it was happening, it was obvious. And she was slipping away.” When Charlotte was 2½, the Figis decided to take her to Children’s Hospital Colorado. A neurologist tested her for the SCN1A gene mutation, which is common in 80% of Dravet Syndrome cases. After two months, the test came back positive. “I remember to this day it was a relief,” Paige said. “Even though it was the worst-case scenario, I felt relief just to know.”

Matt, a Green Beret, decided to leave the military. “Every mission, every training I was going to do I was called home because she was in the pediatric ICU again or in the hospital again.” They were quickly running out of options. They considered a drug from France. Doctors suggested an experimental anti-seizure drug being used on dogs.

Paige took her daughter to Chicago to see a Dravet specialist, who put the child on a ketogenic diet frequently used to treat epilepsy that’s high in fat and low in carbohydrates. The special diet forces the body to make extra ketones, natural chemicals that suppress seizures. It’s mainly recommended for epileptic patients who don’t respond to treatment.

The diet helped control Charlotte’s seizures but had a lot of side effects. She suffered from bone loss. Her immune system plummeted. And new behavioral problems started popping up.

At one point she was outside eating pine cones and stuff, all kinds of different things. As a parent you have to say, let’s take a step back and look at this. Is this truly beneficial treatment because of these other things? – “Matt Figi

 

Two years into the diet, the seizures came back.

The end of the rope

 

In November 2000, Colorado voters approved Amendment 20, which required the state to set up a medical marijuana registry program. There are eight medical conditions for which patients can use cannabis — cancer, glaucoma, HIV/AIDS, muscle spasms, seizures, severe pain, severe nausea and cachexia or dramatic weight loss and muscle atrophy. The average patient in the program is 42 years old. There are 39 patients under the age of 18.

 Paige had consistently voted against marijuana use. That was before Dravet Syndrome entered their lives.  Matt, now a military contractor spending six months a year overseas, used his spare time scouring the Internet looking for anything that would help his little girl.

He found a video online of a California boy whose Dravet was being successfully treated with cannabis. The strain was low in tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the compound in marijuana that’s psychoactive. It was also high in cannabidiol, or CBD, which has medicinal properties but no psychoactivity. Scientists think the CBD quiets the excessive electrical and chemical activity in the brain that causes seizures. It had worked in this boy; his parents saw a major reduction in the boy’s seizures.

By then Charlotte had lost the ability to walk, talk and eat. She was having 300 grand mal seizures a week. Her heart had stopped a number of times. When it happened at home, Paige did cardiopulmonary resuscitation until an ambulance arrived. When it happened in the hospital, where they’d already signed a do-not-resuscitate order, they said their goodbyes. Doctors had even suggested putting Charlotte in a medically induced coma to give her small, battered body a rest.

She was 5 when the Figis learned there was nothing more the hospital could do. That’s when Paige decided to try medical marijuana. But finding two doctors to sign off on a medical marijuana card for Charlotte was no easy feat. She was the youngest patient in the state ever to apply.

Scientists don’t fully understand the long-term effects early marijuana use may have on children. Studies that show negative effects, such as diminished lung function or increased risk of a heart attack, are primarily done on adult marijuana smokers. But Charlotte wouldn’t be smoking the stuff.

Childhood is also a delicate time in brain development. Preliminary research shows that early onset marijuana smokers are slower at tasks, have lower IQs later in life, have a higher risk of stroke and increased incidence of psychotic disorders, leaving some scientists concerned.

“Everyone said no, no, no, no, no, and I kept calling and calling,” Paige said.  She finally reached Dr. Margaret Gedde, who agree to meet with the family.  “(Charlotte’s) been close to death so many times, she’s had so much brain damage from seizure activity and likely the pharmaceutical medication,” Gedde said. “When you put the potential risks of the cannabis in context like that, it’s a very easy decision.”

The second doctor to sign on was Alan Shackelford, a Harvard-trained physician who had a number of medical marijuana patients in his care. He wasn’t familiar with Dravet and because of Charlotte’s age had serious reservations.  “(But) they had exhausted all of her treatment options,” Shackelford said. “There really weren’t any steps they could take beyond what they had done. Everything had been tried — except cannabis.”

Paige found a Denver dispensary that had a small amount of a type of marijuana called R4, said to be low in THC and high in CBD. She paid about $800 for 2 ounces — all that was available — and had a friend extract the oil. She had the oil tested at a lab and started Charlotte out on a small dose. “We were pioneering the whole thing; we were guinea pigging Charlotte,” Paige said. “This is a federally illegal substance. I was terrified to be honest with you.”

But the results were stunning. “When she didn’t have those three, four seizures that first hour, that was the first sign,” Paige recalled. “And I thought well, ‘Let’s go another hour, this has got to be a fluke.’ ” The seizures stopped for another hour. And for the following seven days. Paige said she couldn’t believe it. Neither could Matt. But their supply was running out.

Charlotte’s Web

 Paige soon heard about the Stanley brothers, one of the state’s largest marijuana growers and dispensary owners. These six brothers were crossbreeding a strain of marijuana also high in CBD and low in THC, but they didn’t know what to do with it. No one wanted it; they couldn’t sell it. Still, even they had reservations when they heard about Charlotte’s age. But once they met her, they were on board.

The biggest misconception about treating a child like little Charlotte is most people think that we’re getting her high, most people think she’s getting stoned, Josh Stanley said, stressing his plant’s low THC levels. Charlotte is the most precious little girl in the world to me. I will do anything for her. – Josh Stanley

 

The brothers started the Realm of Caring Foundation, a nonprofit organization that provides cannabis to adults and children suffering from a host of diseases, including epilepsy, cancer, multiple sclerosis and Parkinson’s, who cannot afford this treatment.  People have called them the Robin Hoods of marijuana. Josh Stanley said it’s their calling. They use the money they make from medical marijuana patients and get donations from sponsors who believe in their cause. They only ask patients such as the Figis to donate what they can. “We give (cannabis) away for next to free,” Stanley said. “The state won’t allow us to actually give it away, so we give it away for pennies really.”

Charlotte gets a dose of the cannabis oil twice a day in her food. Gedde found three to four milligrams of oil per pound of the girl’s body weight stopped the seizures.

Today, Charlotte, 6, is thriving. Her seizures only happen two to three times per month, almost solely in her sleep. Not only is she walking, she can ride her bicycle. She feeds herself and is talking more and more each day. “I literally see Charlotte’s brain making connections that haven’t been made in years,” Matt said. “My thought now is, why were we the ones that had to go out and find this cure? This natural cure? How come a doctor didn’t know about this? How come they didn’t make me aware of this?”

The marijuana strain Charlotte and now 41 other patients use to ease painful symptoms of diseases such as epilepsy and cancer has been named after the little girl who is getting her life back one day at a time.  It’s called Charlotte’s Web.

“I didn’t hear her laugh for six months,” Paige said. “I didn’t hear her voice at all, just her crying. I can’t imagine that I would be watching her making these gains that she’s making, doing the things that she’s doing (without the medical marijuana). I don’t take it for granted. Every day is a blessing.” Matt added, “I want to scream it from the rooftops. I want other people, other parents, to know that this is a viable option.”

For the original article by Saundra Young for CNN

 

Sorgente: Marijuana stops child’s severe seizures