Pubdate: Sat, 05 Jul 2003 Source: Halifax Herald (CN NS) Copyright: 2003 The Halifax Herald Limited Contact: http://www.herald.ns.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/180 Author: Dan Arsenault POTHEAD RATS STILL SMART Study May Point Way To Ease Pain Some St. Francis Xavier University lab rats have been getting high and feeling no pain, all in the name of science. John McKenna, a psychology professor at the Antigonish university, hopes soon to publish a study showing rodents feel less pain after receiving a marijuana-mimicking substance, while maintaining some other abilities. "They don't look stoned at all," he said. "It's quite an exciting discovery." Mr. McKenna, who heard Thursday his lab is getting more than $100,000 in federal and provincial funding, started his study more than a year ago. Although early testing shows results, he's careful about calling the experiment a success. "That's part of the scientific process. If you think that you found something then you try and disprove it. If you can't disprove, then you go ahead and publish your results." He hopes to publish his findings in September. What he's looking for is a painkilling compound that doesn't impair the rats. He noted that morphine or other opiates block pain, but have harmful side effects, such as slower heart rates or reduced motor skills. In this experiment, he drills holes into drugged rats' skulls, inserts a tube and, a week later, tests how they respond to pain while on a drug that mimics marijuana. The compound he uses is WIN-55,212 - an experimental substance supplied by a British pharmaceutical company. He said it's more stable than THC, the active ingredient in marijuana. "I'm licensed to import the active ingredient," he said. Mr. McKenna places rats under observation and uses tubes to inject WIN-55,212. Then he applies a painful stimulus - akin to a bee sting - to their feet. Later, using infrared beams, he monitors how much the rats move around. A snack placed inside the cage provides another incentive to move about. "Do they move around in this environment and sniff it and investigate it or . . . (get) stoned to the point they can't move?" He's finding the rats' pain isn't stopping them from investigating while under the influence. The study also tests to see whether the drug makes rats overly active. Mr. McKenna said the test might show something he finds quite exciting. "We think we've discovered a new area of the brain that produces analgesia (absence of pain)." He said all mammals have similar brain structures, so the information will likely be useful in fighting human pain. Ottawa "seems to have a dire need for good scientific information about the whole cannabis-medical marijuana issue. These findings can help." John Cook, director of the Halifax branch of the Cannabis Buyers Club of Canada, is hopeful the study leads to government action, but he's doubtful. "Anything that convinces the government" to make it easier for those in pain to get marijuana is good, he said. "The problem seems to be there are studies for and studies against." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom