Skip to content

Aching for a Better Alternative?

Aching for a Better Alternative?

To close out Arthritis Awareness Month, we’re highlighting how medical marijuana may be a beneficial alternative treatment for this painful and debilitating disease. With over 31 million Americans suffering from various types of arthritis, the condition stands as the leading disability throughout the U.S.

As many may know, arthritis is most common among the middle-aged and elderly and is more so found in women compared to men. Although some classifications of arthritis are minor, the most severe can cause difficulty for daily activities, including writing, walking or climbing the stairs. Before we dive into how medical marijuana can help ease arthritis pain, it is important to understand the symptoms and how patients are at risk for developing this debilitating disease.

Risk Factors:

  • Family history: Some types of arthritis run in families, so you may be more likely to develop arthritis if your parents or siblings have the disorder. Your genes can make you more susceptible to environmental factors that may trigger arthritis.
  • Age: The risk of many types of arthritis — including osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis and gout — increases with age.
  • Your sex: Women are more likely to develop rheumatoid arthritis, while men are more likely to develop gout.
  • Previous joint injury: People who have injured a joint, perhaps while playing a sport, are more likely to eventually develop arthritis.
  • Obesity: Carrying excess weight puts stress on joints, particularly your knees, hips and spine, leading to a higher risk of developing arthritis.

Symptoms:

  • Swelling
  • Stiffness
  • Decreased range of motions
  • Minor to severe pain

How Can Medical Cannabis Help?

For such a painful and uncomfortable disease, arthritis treatments are not always effective, causing patients to lose hope. Fortunately, many believe that medical marijuana has the power to bring great benefits to arthritis patients by alleviating painful symptoms and promoting healthy bones. The top three benefits of treating arthritis patients with medical cannabis are as follows:

  • Pain Management: Shockingly enough, the treatment of musculoskeletal pain with medical marijuana dates back to the 1700s. On top of that, recent evidence suggests that cannabis-based therapies are effective when treating hip, joint and connective tissue disorders. Arthritis is one of the most chronically painful diseases, and cannabis is a promising treatment to help manage that pain.
  • Anti-inflammatory: Studies have shown that cannabis has powerful anti-inflammatory and immune-modulation properties. Patients with rheumatoid arthritis have a great option with medical marijuana after studies have shown that cannabis increases mobility and reduces morning stiffness and inflammation.
  • Bone Health: Bone healthiness is very important in arthritis pathology. As bones undergo destruction and degradation throughout natural aging life, patients become more at risk of developing arthritis and those with it experience more pain. Recent studies have suggested that cannabis treatment promotes positive bone growth and maintenance. 

“The importance of cannabinoids in bone health has been established in transgenic mice that are missing either the CB1 or CB2 receptor. These mice develop osteoporosis much more quickly than normal or wild mice. Research has recently shown that mice missing both cannabinoid receptors have extremely weak bones, a condition that underlies osteoporosis and osteoarthritis pathology” (SafeAccessNow)

Are you interested in treating your patients with medical marijuana, but worried you don’t currently have enough credible data to do so? Join Arfinn Med for FREE to get real medical marijuana treatment efficacies, discuss treatment options with other licensed physicians and stay up-to-date on all of the latest industry findings.

Sources:

https://www.safeaccessnow.org/arthritis

https://www.arthritis.org/https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/arthritis/symptoms-causes/syc-20350772

Stories you may be interested in

Substance in cannabis ‘could boost pancreatic cancer treatments’

A substance found in cannabis plants might boost treatments for patients with pancreatic cancer, research in mice has suggested. Cannabidiol, or CBD, is not psychoactive, meaning it does not produce feelings of being high in those who take it. It is extracted from hemp plants and is legal in the UK, although a CBD product…
Read More

Medical Marijuana a Hit With Seniors

In a new survey, those who turned to it for treating chronic pain reported it reduced pain and decreased the need for opioid painkillers. Nine out of 10 liked it so much they said they’d recommend medical pot to others. “I was on Percocet and replaced it with medical marijuana. Thank you, thank you, thank you,” said one senior. Another patient put…
Read More

Cannabis improves symptoms of Crohn’s disease despite having no effect on gut inflammation

In the first study of its kind, cannabis oil has been shown to significantly improve the symptoms of Crohn’s disease and the quality of life of sufferers but, contrary to previous medical thinking, has no effect on gut inflammation. In a randomised, placebo-controlled study, researchers from Israel have shown that cannabis can produce clinical remission…
Read More

Systematic review: Efficacy and safety of medical marijuana in selected neurologic disorders

Report of the Guideline Development Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology:   We performed a systematic review of medical marijuana (1948–November 2013) to address treatment of symptoms of multiple sclerosis (MS), epilepsy, and movement disorders. We graded the studies according to the American Academy of Neurology classification scheme for therapeutic articles. Read the full…
Read More

After marijuana edibles helped dying Holocaust survivor battle Alzheimer’s, his family’s foundation pushes for more research

A Massachusetts family’s experience giving marijuana edibles to their dying patriarch is set to kick off a desperately needed investigation into how cannabis might treat some of the more troubling symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease, a condition that affects 5.7 million Americans. Read the full story here.
Read More

$2.7 million awarded for medical marijuana research in Colorado

The state has awarded $2.7 million for research into how medical marijuana could replace opioids to ease chronic spinal pain — and how it might treat irritability in children and adolescents with autism. Read the full story here.
Read More

Leave a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.

es_ARSpanish