Pubdate: Wed, 02 Apr 2014 Source: Metro (Ottawa, CN ON) Copyright: 2014 Metro Contact: http://www.metronews.ca/Ottawa Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4032 Author: Trevor Greenway GIRL WITH EPILEPSY NEEDS MARIJUANA EXTRACT, MOM SAYS 'Charlotte's Web'. Non-THC Strain Of Marijuana Only Available In The U.S. Kim Martelle just wants her daughter to grow up like other kids: playing, swimming and getting into a little bit of trouble. But for eight-year-old Cadence Hope, many of her days have been spent in a wheelchair with a hockey helmet strapped to her head to prevent brain damage from the multiple "aggressive seizures" she has daily. "While parents are busy buying hockey helmets for their kids to play hockey, we were busy buying a hockey helmet so that our daughter could go out in the 40 C heat of summer to play with her brother," said Martelle, beginning to cry. The little girl has intractable epilepsy and Martelle has been reading miracle stories from the U.S. about a strain of marijuana called Charlotte's Web that has been helping kids with epilepsy and other genetic disorders lead normal lives in Colorado. Charlotte's Web reportedly has no psychoactive properties and won't get a user high, but for kids like Cadence, it could make all the difference. "We are watching kids basically go from catatonic in wheelchairs to riding bicycles, swimming in swimming pools, saying 'mama and 'dada' for maybe the first time in their lives," said Martelle, during a medical marijuana rally on Parliament Hill Tuesday. Martelle and others are fighting to have the drug legalized in the country - or at least studied extensively. But Martelle says she can't get legal access to the drug to extract the cannabidiol (CBD) and mix it into her daughter's diet. Cadence has tried the mainstream medical route, taking all sorts of "toxic" pills that nearly paralyzed her from the neck down. A ketogenic, high-fat, lowcarb diet has helped Cadence regain her mobility, Martelle says. Cadence can move around and play, but still has nightly seizures. Moving to Colorado is not an option for the family, so Martelle hopes pot will become a "front line treatment" for epilepsy, MS and other diseases. "We need to reclassify cannabis as a medicinal herb, not a drug," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D