Robert Ashley, M.D.,
Dear Doctor: I try not to use opioids for my chronic back pain, but
I’m finding myself turning to them more often. Could marijuana help?
Dear
Reader: Pain is one of most difficult aspects of medicine to
understand. No one can actually feel the pain of another person, but we
can see the suffering that it causes. As doctors, we try to alleviate
pain in a number of ways.
Opiates — starting with opium, which is
derived from the poppy plant — have been used for pain relief for more
than 3,000 years. The opiates morphine and codeine, also from the poppy
plant, were isolated and made available in the early 1800s. Since that
time, multiple synthetic opiates such as hydrocodone and oxycodone have
been widely used for pain. These drugs attach to opiate receptors in
both the brain and spinal cord.
One
problem with opiates is that they relieve pain in the short term, but
will not control it in the long term. Thus to relieve chronic pain, a
person has to perpetually use the medication — creating one of the
addictive aspects of the drugs. The other problem with opiates is that
people become tolerant of the medications, meaning that with consistent
use, a person needs more medication to relieve the same amount of pain.
For
these reasons, opium and its progeny have been abused worldwide. The
United States is facing an epidemic of opiate abuse, with prescription
opiate medication leading to a rapid increase in lethal drug overdoses.
In 2014, more than 18,000 people died from overdosing on prescription
opiates, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
Marijuana has been used also for more than 3,000
years. It works through the endocannabinoid system of the body, which
has receptors in the brain and spinal cord as well as the immune system.
The receptors in the brain and spinal cord can decrease muscle spasms
and pain, while those receptors in the immune system can decrease
inflammation and pain.
A
2015 study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association
(JAMA) looked at 14 different clinical trials of marijuana use by
multiple sclerosis patients and found relief from chronic pain, nerve
pain, and pain and muscle spasm. Another study published in 2015 in JAMA
looked at 28 different studies with 2,454 patients and found a 30
percent reduction of pain with cannabis-related products compared with
placebo.
Opiates can relieve pain in the short term, such as after
surgery or an acute injury. But due to their addictive potential and
lack of long-term benefit, opiates are not a good choice for long-term
pain relief.
Marijuana is not without its own potential risks and
side effects. These include short-term memory loss, poor motor
coordination, paranoid thoughts and, for some, psychosis. Long-term use
can also create the potential for addiction, but not to the degree of
opiate medications. Also, overdosing on marijuana doesn’t lead to death,
as it can with opiates.
My suggestion in regard to chronic back
pain is to try other methods of pain control over opioids.
These include
physical therapy, yoga and stretching. If these don’t work, marijuana
is an option, but beware of its side effects — and try to minimize its
use.
No comments:
Post a Comment