for Parkinson’s disease have been conducted since
the seventies, due to the important number of
patients suffering from the illness reporting
an improvement of their symptoms following
the consumption of cannabis.
Motor symptoms
studies, as they constitute the most visible and
most debilitating disorders in relation with
Parkinson’s disease.
As early as the eighties, cannabinoids have been shown to alleviate dystonia, dyskinesia, and akinesia,
all of them motor symptoms which have been known to impact certain Parkinson’s patients. For
instance, controlled doses of synthetic cannabinoids have been able to reduce dyskinesia in patients
suffering
from Parkinson’s disease or Parkinsonism for years by 30%. Incidentally, medicinal cannabis as
well as cannabis extracts-based medications are already being used to treat general spasticity in the
context of other conditions such as multiple sclerosis or Gilles de la Tourette’s syndrome.
Neurodegeneration
is the origin of the aforementioned motor symptoms – has also been relatively active, with a few break
through studies published during the previous decade. The neuroprotective properties of cannabinoids
had already been proven on many occasions, and the impact it could have on Parkinson’s disease
was confirmed as well .
In 2004, a research laboratory injected rats with an agonist of Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), one of the
major psychoactive substances of cannabis, followed by the injection of a toxin triggering an animal version
of Parkinson’s. Upon testing of these rats in parallel with a control group of healthy subjects,
researchers observed that their brains were virtually indistinguishable. In a second series of tests, other
rats were this time first injected with the toxin, then with the THC agonist, with positive results as well,
especially when THC was combined with Cannabidiol (CBD), a non-psychoactive cannabinoid known
for its medicinal properties. In human terms, the second test suggested that cannabinoids intake could
slow down the progression of the disease for several years.
Recent advances
curative treatment has been developed, partly due to the lack of availability of medicinal cannabis dedicated
to research. This is why the aforementioned studies have so far been considered with relative
caution, especially since it was observed that an excessive dose of cannabis could reverse its own effects
and temporarily worsen some of the motor symptoms. These results were however partly linked to the
relative inefficacy of clinical tests conducted with synthetic cannabinoids, as well as the lack of familiarity
of the subjects tested with medicinal marijuana or cannabis extracts-based medication.
many observational studies were published, focusing on patients already self-medicating with cannabis.
The tests measured their reaction to a “dose” of medicinal cannabis, once again with positive outcomes
in regards to motor symptoms as well as non-motor symptoms. Patients participating to the study
reported that a “dose” of cannabis could relieve them for a period of 2 to 3 hours.
the United States.
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