This Blog is about Cannabis, marijuana, weed, ganja.
Tuesday, 8 October 2019
How CBD and THC balance each other out in marijuana
By brian owens
(Inside Science) -- Many people who use cannabis do it for the euphoric
effects caused by the main psychoactive ingredient,
tetrahydrocannabinol, often called THC. But THC can also cause
unpleasant side effects like paranoia, dissociative thoughts, impaired
memory or even psychotic episodes. As cannabis has become more potent,
it is becoming more likely that some users will experience those
effects. But another compound present in the plant, the non-psychoactive
cannabidiol, actually works against THC and can block those negative
effects.
Now a team of researchers led by Steven Laviolette, a neuroscientist at the University of Western Ontario in London, Canada,
has figured out how the two compounds interact in the brain, and how
CBD, as cannabidiol is also known, balances out the negative psychiatric
side effects of THC. Their work was published recently in the Journal of Neuroscience.
Working with rats, Laviolette focused on an area of the brain called the
ventral hippocampus, which is involved in emotional control and is
known to be vulnerable to some of the long-term effects of high-potency
THC. Rats who were given THC exhibited many of the acute negative side
effects in behavioral tests, such as anxiety about new environments, and
problems with social interaction, memory, and their ability to filter
out unnecessary sensory data. When they examined the rats’ brains after
the tests, the researchers determined that the effects were caused by an
overactive cellular signaling molecule called extracellular
signal-regulated kinase, or ERK.
"We found that THC is overstimulating the ERK pathway, altering
oscillation patterns in the brain linked to schizophrenia and disturbing
the dopamine system," said Laviolette.
Rats given both CBD and THC had normal ERK signals, and did not show
signs of anxiety, paranoia or memory loss in the behavioral tests. The
researchers believe that means that the CBD prevented the
overstimulation of the ERK pathway.
Daniele Piomelli, a neuroscientist at the University of California,
Irvine who was not involved in the study, said CBD has been long
suspected to modulate the effects of THC, but the mechanism has remained
unclear. "This study is interesting because it provides at the
molecular and synaptic level a mechanism by which CBD can counter THC,"
he said.
Some previous studies suggested that CBD may counter THC by interfering
with its ability to bind to THC’s main molecular target in the brain,
the CB1 receptor. But Piomelli said that CBD’s modulating effect may not
involve the CB1 receptor itself.
CBD is "pharmacologically messy," said Laviolette, binding to a wide
variety of different receptors in the body. Laviolette’s work shows that
at some point in the intracellular machinery the two compounds share
some kind of mechanism by which they can modulate each others’ actions,
but "whether that is happening at the CB1 receptor, we still need to
figure that out," said Laviolette.
Piomelli said that this study is important because sorting out the
biological mechanism will provide background for much-needed studies in
humans on how CBD can affect the short- and long-term effects of THC.
"It opens the door and offers insights that future studies in people
could build upon," he said.
While blocking many of the psychotropic effects of THC may seem
counterproductive to recreational users, Laviolette said there are many
people who use cannabis for medical reasons who may want to avoid them.
"People using it for pain relief, anxiety, multiple sclerosis or
glaucoma are not looking to get high," he said. "If you want to avoid
the negative effects, you may want to use strains that have a high CBD
content."
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