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Medical Forum / Diseases and Disorders / Arthritis / April 2005

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Canada - Cannabis based drug approved for MS

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Mary Z - 22 Apr 2005 00:38 GMT
They would be arrested by the DEA here in the US. -- MZ

Canada Approves Cannabis-Based Painkiller

By Beth Duff-Brown
AP
04/21/05 8:10 AM PT

Dr. Allan Gordon, a neurologist and director of the Wasser Pain
Management Center at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto, said that
because Sativex is administered as a spray, it provides controlled
doses and allows the patient to decide how much he or she needs.

Canada has become the first country in the world to approve a
cannabis-based painkiller for patients suffering multiple sclerosis, a
move applauded by those with the disease and proponents of medical
uses for marijuana.

Health Canada, the federal agency that oversees medical care for
Canadians, announced on Tuesday it had approved the prescription
painkiller Sativex, made from components derived from the cannabis
plant that have been shown to ease pain.

The British drug company GW Pharmaceuticals, which developed the drug,
said Canada is the first country to grant regulatory approval for
Sativex, which will be marketed in Canada by Bayer HealthCare and
could be in pharmacies by summer. The drug can be sprayed under the
tongue or inside the cheek, avoiding the carcinogenic dangers of
smoking pot.

New Hope for MS Patients
Medical professionals voice high hopes for the drug's success.

"The pain (of multiple sclerosis) can be absolutely excruciating and
very debilitating," said Judith H. Watt-Watson, a professor at the
University of Toronto's Center for the Study of Pain. "There's an
urgent need for more options."

Many people with multiple sclerosis, an autoimmune disease that
affects the central nervous system, treat their pain by smoking
marijuana. But the dose is hard to regulate and the drug is difficult
to obtain legally.

About 50,000 Canadians and 400,000 Americans have MS and some 2.5
million people are believed to be afflicted worldwide, according to
the New York-based National Multiple Sclerosis Society.

About half of MS patients suffer from chronic pain.

"It's hard to explain to someone who has never felt this type of
pain," said Steve Walsh of Ontario, who suffers from MS and was eager
to try the new drug. "It's like being plugged into an electric socket
all the time. At times, putting on clothes or anything touching me can
be too much to take."

He told The Globe and Mail that he's smoked marijuana in an attempt to
ease his pain, but didn't like the feeling of being out of control.

Medicinal Marijuana
Dr. Allan Gordon, a neurologist and director of the Wasser Pain
Management Center at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto, said that
because Sativex is administered as a spray, it provides controlled
doses and allows the patient to decide how much he or she needs.

Proponents of legalizing medicinal marijuana are hailing the new drug.

"This confirms that virtually everything the U.S. government has told
us about marijuana is wrong," said Rob Kampia, executive director of
the Marijuana Policy Project in Washington, D.C.. The organization is
fighting to have marijuana legalized for medical use. "This product
offers patients and doctors a new option and we hope Americans will
have access to it soon."

In the United States, the federal government has classified marijuana
as a drug that is as dangerous as heroin, although 10 states have
passed laws that allow its use under medical supervision.

In 2001, Canada became the first country to adopt a system regulating
the medicinal use of marijuana for people suffering from terminal
illnesses and chronic conditions.  

Visit my website:
http://www.mzuschlag.com
tejoyo@yahoo.com - 22 Apr 2005 19:50 GMT
This whole debate really burns me. What in the world is the point of
withholding something so mild that brings such relief to so many
people? It truly enrages me. And no, believe it or not I don't use it,
never have-tried it once in college. Would use it in a second if I
thought it would work and had easier access to it than I do now.
shape - 25 Apr 2005 05:18 GMT
Whether you are liberal or conservative, it is shameful that a society
prohibits natural pain relief.  We are learning how dangerous some of
these man-made drugs are for controlling pain.  The natural ones,
opiates amd cannibis, are perfectly safe.  No one has ever died of an
overdose of marijuana.  It is the drug industry that controls Washington
that will keep this from becoming available in the US.  Look for the
propaganda campaign to start right away.

> This whole debate really burns me. What in the world is the point of
> withholding something so mild that brings such relief to so many
> people? It truly enrages me. And no, believe it or not I don't use it,
> never have-tried it once in college. Would use it in a second if I
> thought it would work and had easier access to it than I do now.
d'huit - 25 Apr 2005 05:37 GMT
> They would be arrested by the DEA here in the US. -- MZ

true.   :-(

kate

> Canada Approves Cannabis-Based Painkiller
>
[quoted text clipped - 77 lines]
> Visit my website:
> http://www.mzuschlag.com 
 
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