I have a disabling condition for which medical marijuana has been approved in the state of New Mexico. Actually I know of sixteen different conditions for which this is recommended; painful peripheral neuropathy, intractable nausea/vomiting, severe anorexia/cachexia, hepatitis C infection currently receiving antiviral treatment, Crohn’s disease, Post-traumatic Stress Disorder, Inflammatory Autoimmune-mediated Arthritis, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (Lou Gehrig’s disease), cancer, glaucoma, multiple sclerosis, damage to the nervous tissue of the spinal cord with intractable spasticity, epilepsy, HIV/AIDS, and hospice patients.
I was wondering if anyone believes that medical marijuana (cannabinoids) might be useful for ME/CFS symptoms and/or if anyone has additional information about the subject?
Thanks,
Lion
This is anecdotal, but one of my ME/CFS specialists who has treated thousands of ME/CFS patients said that some of his patients report that "when they smoke marijuana, they feel great the next day." This doctor is not a quack either. I don't want to name him by name, but he's pretty highly respected among ME/CFS doctors. He also made a point to tell me that
he was not recommending I smoke marijuana. This was in the context of a larger discussion about how different things help different people.
I later experimented with it, but didn't feel better or worse the next day.
I remember from before I got sick that marijuana tends to close off one's capillaries and make the extemities feel cold. Obviously, this is a problem with ME too, so I wasn't anxious to exacerbate the symptoms by smoking pot. IIRC, it also increases heart rate. So as someone with tachycardia, I thought this might also be a problem. But I didn't notice either of these symptoms being exacerbated.
The only benefit I experienced was, for someone who formerly enjoyed alcohol, caffeine, and other types of mood altering substances -- substances which are now ruled out due to ME/CFS -- it was nice to have an option for a little escapism. I couldn't care less whether the law frowns on it. I'm sick and don't have many other pleasurable escapes open to me right now. As far as I'm concerned, I'm due this.
I suspect that it would be more helpful for people with pain or inflammation issues. But you might want to think twice about it if you have OI/POTS issues (and let's face it, who among us doesn't?), as marijuana results in an initial increase in blood pressure, but then it later drops to lower than normal. It affects everyone a little differently tough, and not everyone will experience the drop. For those people, the initial BP increase might actually help with POTS.