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The Cannabis Papers
- a citizen's guide to cannabinoids
by Publius
Fighting cancer is a fight for your life
2005 - that is a year I won't soon forget. When I realized the uphill battles I faced, I quickly determined I wanted to be a survivor, and my entire focus was on beating the cancers.
In 2005 at the age of 65, I was diagnosed with colon cancer and subsequently with lymph and liver cancer. My initial colon resection removed 23 cancerous lymph nodes and lesions. I then began a six-month regimen of chemotherapy prior to removal of half my liver in December - and back to chemo for an additional three months to ensure eradication.
Shortly before starting chemotherapy, I had a catheter implanted in my left arm. This made the hundreds of injections a lot less painful. The medical professionals were at their best, though my experience as a patient was chillingly lonely. My chemo routine was methodical. I went into the therapy center on alternate Wednesdays. I got a blood test. I filled out a form about what I was experiencing emotionally and physically. I sat in a chair for six hours while being injected with incredibly expensive chemo drugs. I also had to wear a pressurized bottle that injected different chemo drug for two more days. I returned on Fridays to get unhooked from the bottle.
Wednesdays through Saturdays were usually better. On Sundays the nausea and diarrhea started and continued for about seven days. During this time I spent much of my day in bed - the term "sick as a dog" comes to mind. If you have ever experienced seasickness, imagine it combined with diarrhea and lasting for a week. (The "middle of the night while sleeping diarrhea" is downright embarrassing.) My doctor recommended anti-nausea medicine and I took up to 18 Imodium pills a day.
By Mondays and Tuesdays I generally felt stronger - then back to the center on Wednesday for more chemotherapy. Over the six months I had lost 40 pounds, some of my hair and basically looked and felt fatigued.
It was during this time that I was surprised when a close relative suggested that I try "marijuana" to relieve my symptoms. I did try it. Never having been a regular smoker of anything, the first few times I gagged from the smoke and vomited. I did notice my nausea had subsided and I attributed this fact to vomiting. As I became accustomed to taking smaller amounts of cannabis smoke more frequently, I learned to control my gag reflex. - That's when the amazement started: I would go from bed-ridden and nauseous to actually feeling fine in about ten minutes. - And yes, it felt like a miracle drug!
My enthusiasm was that of a born-again convert.
I wanted the world to know.
I wanted my fellow sufferers to know.
I wanted to share the discovery.
I wanted to tell everyone of an easy treatment that quickly relieved my symptoms.
I wanted to tell my doctor. I did. He obviously didn't want to hear about, nor comment on, my cannabis use. Crestfallen, I realized that he felt he could not. He too was a victim of the system - a victim of cannabis prohibition. My doctor wouldn't (or couldn't) discuss the healing effects of cannabinoids. We were at an impasse. Exactly when my future mattered most we couldn't talk to each other. Here I was sitting with the doctor and we couldn't discuss how I was staying alive. The medicine that worked we couldn't discuss, and the medicines that didn't work we could discuss at length.
Vital to chemotherapy is the ability to keep food down - to stay hydrated. Vomiting was the problem - cannabis was the solution. I wanted to talk to my doctor about my effective treatment. But couldn't.
Our government has historically denied patients and scientific evidence regarding the healing effects of cannabis and cannabinoids. The feds go so far as to say that no evidence exists that "marijuana" has any medical value, as evident in the retention of cannabis as a Schedule 1 narcotic. Given the scientific findings and research, this is willful ignorance. Anyone with a computer and internet access can educate themselves about cannabinoids. Aren't federal officials capable of this?
Fourteen state governments have laws to protect patients, doctors, and caregivers. In states like Michigan, dispensaries are opening and thousands of patients and caregivers are now protected by law. In the past, our government has harassed doctors, raided dispensaries and threatened patients in medical cannabis states. We are witnessing the transformation of this situation. As the founders envisioned, the citizens are leading - now it's up to the government to follow.
Publius
Search terms
Chemotherapy and CBs: Cancers and CBs: Glioma: Cannabidiol.
Research and selected readings
2010: Endocannabinoids selectively enhance sweet taste, Ryusuke Yoshida, et al, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, 2010:107:2:935-939.
2009: Inhibition of tumor prostrate PC-3 cell growth by cannabinoids R (+) Methanandamide and JWH-015: Involvement of CB2, N. Olea-Herrero, et al, British Journal of Cancer, 2009:101:940-950.
2008: Expression of cannabinoid receptors type 1 and type 2 in non-Hodgkin lymphoma: growth inhibition by receptor activation, Kirstin Gustafsson, et al, International Journal of Cancer, 2008: 123:1025-1033.
2007: Cannabidiol - Recent Advances, Raphael Mechoulam, et al, Chemistry & Biodiversity, 2007:4:8:1678-1692.
2005: The endocannabinoid system in chronic liver disease, Daniel Zamora-Valdes, et al, Annals of Hepatology, 2005:4(4):248-254.
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