The Link Between Cannabis And Autoimmune Diseases


Project CBD defines autoimmune diseases as “diseases in which your body’s defense system triggers an abnormal inflammatory response that causes damage to the body’s own tissues. Many conditions fall into this category, including multiple sclerosis, Crohn’s disease, lupus, and celiac disease.
Symptoms may include fatigue, pain, swelling, fever, nausea, numbness, rashes, or hair loss.” These conditions are widespread with about 20% of the populations suffering from some sort of autoimmune disease, the majority of whom are female.
Researchers behind a 2010 study published in the journal Immunobiology point to the possibilities of cannabis as a viable treatment for autoimmune diseases: “Cannabinoids have been shown to act as potent immunosuppressive and anti-inflammatory agents and have been shown to mediate beneficial effects in a wide range of immune-mediated diseases such as multiple sclerosis, diabetes, septic shock, rheumatoid arthritis, and allergic asthma.”

Even when U.S. based researchers can observe a connection between cannabis and a particular autoimmune disease like fibromyalgia, they are unable to conduct clinical trials at this present juncture due to cannabis’ ongoing classification as a schedule 1 drug. Rae observes, “We need research from the cellular molecular mechanisms up to Phase III clinical trails in order to determine which cannabis at which doses, how many times per day, and in which patients will produce results.”
Without this scientific data, researchers cannot ascertain with clinical accuracy the best types of cannabis or delivery methods for treating various autoimmune diseases. Rae opines, “This is why we need for the US barriers to research to be eliminated because those are exactly the kinds of questions the patients, doctors, the FDA, and the investigators themselves want the answers to.”