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PTSD & THC
Numerous studies have come to the same results: there’s promising evidence that cannabis functions as a substitute for prescription drugs, particularly opioids. Cannabis access is associated with reduced rates of opioid use and abuse, opioid-related hospitalizations, opioid-related traffic fatalities, opioid-related drug treatment admissions, and opioid-related overdose deaths.
Cannabis as an remedy for PTSD
Cannabis has been shown to help PTSD symptoms in major ways. This debilitating condition causes chronic problems such as nightmares, panic attacks, hypervigilance, detachment from others, overwhelming emotions, and self-destructive behavior. In some cases, these overwhelming symptoms can even lead to suicide.
Researchers at Wayne State University in Detroit, MI, looked at how cannabis use impacts the amygdala response of those dealing with trauma related anxiety, such as PTSD. This Wayne State University study examined the amygdala responses in three groups of participants - healthy controls who had not been exposed to trauma, trauma exposed adults without PTSD and trauma exposed adults with PTSD. Using a randomized, double-blind procedure, the 71 participants were either given a low dose of THC or a placebo. Then they were exposed to threatening stimuli and their amygdala responses were recorded.
Those exposed to THC had lowered threat-related amygdala reactivity. This means that those who took low doses of THC showed measurable signs of reduced fear and anxiety in situations designed to trigger fear. Since these results were found in all three groups, it suggests that even those with PTSD were able to experience less fear with THC in their system.
Researchers at Brazil’s Federal University of Parana, explored how cannabis can help those with PTSD - extinguishing the intensity associated with memories of their trauma. This mode of treating PTSD was first hypothesized by Yale associate professor of psychiatry R. Andrew Sewell who suggested that cannabis may be able to help PTSD patients “overwrite” traumatic memories with new memories in a process called ‘extinction learning’.
In an interview with East Bay Express, Sewell explained that the extinction learning process usually helps trauma resolve on its own. He gave the example of an Iraq War Veteran who gets PTSD symptoms while driving under bridges - after dodging explosives thrown down from bridges during the war. "Suppose some part of your reptile brain thinks if you walk under a bridge you're going to die," Sewell explained "life becomes very hard."
For most who experience traumatic incidents, these fears subside after 6 months or so because of the extinction learning process. New memories of the traumatic trigger form and override the old. Someone with a traumatic experience of explosives being dropped from bridges, may at first feel terrified as they approach any bridge - with traumatic memories flooding their mind. But after months of nothing bad happening around bridges, most will begin to feel bridges are less dangerous, as many memories of driving under bridges safely accumulate. The old memories still linger, but they don’t cause the increase in fear when the trigger (like the bridge) is present. So while most with trauma remember the traumatic incidents, those memories no longer trigger intense fear.
But for those with PTSD, extinction learning doesn’t happen. The trauma attached to the old memories continues to cause problems.
It turns out that cannabis is able to come to the rescue. Cannabis stimulates CB1 - a receptor in the endocannabinoid system has the ability to improve extinction learning in animal studies. Interestingly, those with PTSD show impaired functioning of the endocannabinoid system - which may be why they are unable to go through the normal extinction learning process. Cannabis is able to jump start this process - allowing those with PTSD to access extinction learning like their healthy counterparts, and curing the PTSD by helping them to move on from their trauma.
A recent study from Brazil’s Federal University of Parana looked deeper into this mechanism. These researchers conducted a thorough review of the cannabis literature from 1974-2020 looking for evidence from controlled human trials to support or refute the theory that cannabis helps with ‘extinction’ of traumatic memories.
The researchers found that cannabis did indeed help! Low doses of the cannabinoid THC or THC combined with another cannabinoid CBD were both able to enhance the extinction rate for challenging memories - and reduce overall anxiety responses. From this study, it seems that THC drives the extinction rate improvements, while CBD can help alleviate potential side effects from higher doses of THC.
The authors conclude that the current evidence from both healthy humans and PTSD patients suggests that these forms of cannabis “suppress anxiety and aversive memory expression without producing significant adverse effects.”
These studies provide some answers about why cannabis is helping PTSD patients feel better - both immediately and in the long run. For the PTSD sufferer, cannabis usage can make a tremendous difference to getting over the traumatic event. Here at EYE OF Aery, we are happy to participate in spreading this research and providing healthy and delicious cannabis products!
9 Rabinak CA, Blanchette A, Zabik NL, Peters C, Marusak HA, Iadipaolo A, Elrahal F. Cannabinoid modulation of corticolimbic activation to threat in trauma-exposed adults: a preliminary study. Psychopharmacology (Berl). 2020 Jun;237(6):1813-1826. doi: 10.1007/s00213-020-05499-8. Epub 2020 Mar 11. PMID: 32162103; PMCID: PMC7244361. 10 Raymundi AM, da Silva TR, Sohn JMB, Bertoglio LJ, Stern CA. Effects of ∆9-tetrahydrocannabinol on aversive memories and anxiety: a review from human studies. BMC Psychiatry. 2020 Aug 26;20(1):420. doi: 10.1186/s12888-020-02813-8. PMID: 32842985; PMCID: PMC7448997. 11 https://eastbayexpress.com/can-pot-help-cure-ptsd-1/ 12 https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/post-traumatic-stress-disorder/symptoms-causes/syc-20355967 13 Scarante FF, Vila-Verde C, Detoni VL, Ferreira-Junior NC, Guimarães FS, Campos AC. Cannabinoid Modulation of the Stressed Hippocampus. Front Mol Neurosci. 2017 Dec 19;10:411. doi: 10.3389/fnmol.2017.00411. PMID: 29311804; PMCID: PMC5742214. 14 Raymundi AM, da Silva TR, Sohn JMB, Bertoglio LJ, Stern CA. Effects of ∆9-tetrahydrocannabinol on aversive memories and anxiety: a review from human studies. BMC Psychiatry. 2020 Aug 26;20(1):420. doi: 10.1186/s12888-020-02813-8. PMID: 32842985; PMCID: PMC7448997.
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