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View Full Version : Cannabis (a.k.a. Marjuana) can kill cancer.



ChadAndrewAmKon
06-27-2008, 03:04 PM
Cannabis (a.k.a. Marijuana) can be used an alternative treatment for gliomas, and cannabis can selectively target the cancer in peoples' bodies while leaving healthy cells intact. In America & other countries, federal bureaucrats were aware of this treatment, but deliberately withheld this information from the public?

What Your Government Knows About Cannabis And Cancer — And Isn’t Telling You (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/paul-armentano/what-your-government-know_b_108712.html?view=print)

Paul Armentano /Huffington Post | June 25, 2008 (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/paul-armentano/what-your-government-know_b_108712.html?view=print)


In 2007, I reviewed over 150 published preclinical and clinical studies assessing the therapeutic potential of marijuana and several of its active compounds, known as cannabinoids. I summarized these numerous studies in a book, now in its third edition, entitled Emerging Clinical Applications for Cannabis and Cannabinoids: A Review of the Scientific Literature. (NORML Foundation, 2008 ) One chapter in this book, which summarized the findings of more than 30 separate trials and literature reviews, was dedicated to the use of cannabinoids as potential anti-cancer agents, particularly in the treatment of gliomas.

Not familiar with this scientific research? Your government is.

In fact, the first experiment documenting pot’s potent anti-cancer effects took place in 1974 at the Medical College of Virginia at the behest federal bureaucrats. The results of that study, reported in an Aug. 18, 1974, Washington Post newspaper feature, were that marijuana’s primary psychoactive component, THC, “slowed the growth of lung cancers, breast cancers and a virus-induced leukemia in laboratory mice, and prolonged their lives by as much as 36 percent.”

Despite these favorable preliminary findings (eventually published the following year in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute), U.S. government officials refused to authorize any follow-up research until conducting a similar — though secret — preclinical trial in the mid-1990s. That study, conducted by the U.S. National Toxicology Program to the tune of $2 million, concluded that mice and rats administered high doses of THC over long periods had greater protection against malignant tumors than untreated controls.

However, rather than publicize their findings, the U.S. government shelved the results, which only became public after a draft copy of its findings were leaked to the medical journal AIDS Treatment News, which in turn forwarded the story to the national media.

In the years since the completion of the National Toxicology trial, the U.S. government has yet to authorize a single additional study examining the drug’s potential anti-cancer properties. (Federal permission is necessary in order to conduct clinical research on marijuana because of its illegal status as a schedule I controlled substance.)

Fortunately, in the past 10 years scientists overseas have generously picked up where U.S. researchers so abruptly left off, reporting that cannabinoids can halt the spread of numerous cancer cells — including prostate cancer, breast cancer, lung cancer, pancreatic cancer, and brain cancer. (An excellent paper summarizing much of this research, “Cannabinoids for Cancer Treatment: Progress and Promise,” appears in the January 2008 edition of the journal Cancer Research.) A 2006 patient trial published in the British Journal of Cancer even reported that the intracranial administration of THC was associated with reduced tumor cell proliferation in humans with advanced glioblastoma.

Writing earlier this year in the scientific journal Expert Review of Neurotherapeutics, Italian researchers reiterated, “(C)annabinoids have displayed a great potency in reducing glioma tumor growth. (They) appear to be selective antitumoral agents as they kill glioma cells without affecting the viability of nontransformed counterparts.” Not one mainstream media outlet reported their findings. Perhaps now they’ll pay better attention.

What possible advancements in the treatment of cancer may have been achieved over the past 34 years had U.S. government officials chosen to advance — rather than suppress — clinical research into the anti-cancer effects of cannabis? It’s a shame we have to speculate; it’s even more tragic that the families of Senator Kennedy and thousands of others must suffer while we do.

Bitchkoma
06-27-2008, 03:11 PM
I suppose this benefit is cancelled out if you smoke spliffs?

skunk
06-27-2008, 03:58 PM
I suppose this benefit is cancelled out if you smoke spliffs?

What's amazing about the cannabis plant, is that smoking doesn't really have any negative affects. The beauty lies in the makeup of the chemicals in the plant itself.

Cannabinoids attach themselves to the same receptors in the lungs that the tar would cling on to. Your lungs only absorb a small amount of the tar, and then the chemicals begin to ward off the rest of the tar. No harm, no foul.

This is seriously THE plant to save the entire planet. Food, fuel, medicine, nitrogen fixer, soil improver, daily supplement, housing material, clothing material, and others that I can't think of at the moment.

All from ONE PLANT!

I guess there's technically 3 different kinds; one grown for seed, one for fiber, one for their buds. But they're all the same plant, just have been bred for different purposes.

Bitchkoma
06-27-2008, 04:14 PM
You're saying the weed cancels the negative effects of the tobacco?

skunk
06-27-2008, 04:15 PM
You're saying the weed cancels the negative effects of the tobacco?

SI SI SI!!!

Bitchkoma
06-27-2008, 04:21 PM
So will the weed still be able to kill the cancer? I mean it's already battled tobacco on it's way in. Maybe the tobacco neutralised it's anti-carcinogenic properties.

skunk
06-27-2008, 04:24 PM
So will the weed still be able to kill the cancer? I mean it's already battled tobacco on it's way in. Maybe the tobacco neutralised it's anti-carcinogenic properties.

Cannabis is administered best without tobacco...If you're smoking pure tobacco, you don't really have to worry that much about the harmful affects anyway. Its when you're smoking cigarettes that you run into problems.

Natives of the Americas were smoking tobacco long before Europeans arrived, but they were using it medicinally, not recreationally. Therein lies the problem of its use.

Tobacco is not meant to be smoked all the time, but cannabis is.

I'm not sure there's been any studies done with tobacco and cannabis in regards to cancer. Your best bet would be to stay away from tobacco when consuming cannabis, and if you are going to combine then, use a VAPORIZER. There will be no carcinogens to begin with at that point.

Bitchkoma
06-27-2008, 04:32 PM
Without tobacco I'd zone out too much. The concentration improving properties of the tobacco is why I add it. Plus the weed is usually too damp to burn without tobacco added.

skunk
06-27-2008, 04:38 PM
Well I wouldn't worry about getting cancer. There are cannabis strains that will give you more of an 'up-buzz high', but they're not all that common when the herb is in short supply. The indicas are grown because they tend to be stronger and hit harder. If you have a choice, try out a sativa. You'll get more of a high than a stone, which you may prefer.

Bitchkoma
06-27-2008, 04:43 PM
No choices. What the police let in is what we get.

apeci
06-27-2008, 10:12 PM
Burnt plant matter contains carcinogens, cannabis not excluded, but there's no cases of people developing lung cancer from cannabis when there wasn't also a history of tobacco use. However most of the damage from smoking pot is from the temperature of the smoke and the tar content. Water pipe or vaporizer solves this for the most part. And no, it does not cancel out tobacco. Nicotine abuse trashes your heart, kidneys, and arterial walls. THC doesn't magically make it not do that. But it will help open your airways so you can eject some of the tar buildup.


A 2006 patient trial published in the British Journal of Cancer even reported that the intracranial administration of THC was associated with reduced tumor cell proliferation in humans with advanced glioblastoma.
Take it to the head has a whole new meaning.