Pubdate: Sun, 28 Dec 2014 Source: Sunday Mail (Australia) Copyright: 2014 Queensland Newspapers Contact: http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/editorial/letter Website: http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/sundaymail Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/435 Page: 7 CANNABIS HELP SOUGHT FOR THE LOVE OF ANGUS THERE'S a whiteboard on the kitchen wall in the Tune house with an important message. "You are BRAVER than you believe," it starts. "STRONGER than you seem. SMARTER than you think. And LOVED more than you'll ever know!" A photograph is pinned to the bottom. In it, Katrina Tune lies in a hospital bed. They've wheeled her in to see her little boy, born by caesarean section only an hour before. He isn't breathing on his own. It would be days before she'd give him a name, refusing to do so until they'd removed the breathing tubes so she could see his face. Those big eyes. The cherub lips. His name was Angus.In his 23 short months of life, Angus has had 12 hospital admissions, numerous trips to the emergency department, 17 EEGs and has been prescribed five different anticonvulsants - some with terrible side effects. And while they don't have an official diagnosis, it is likely Angus has an extremely rare form of epilepsy called Ohtahara syndrome. It is a serious, life-threatening disorder with seizures that are often resistant to epilepsy medications. However, the type of seizures he suffers means Angus would likely benefit from medical cannabis - a treatment already proving effective in epileptic children and about to be trialled in NSW. "From what I have researched about medical cannabis, Angus is a good candidate and this drug, in my opinion, presents no greater risk to him than any of the current legal treatment options for his type of epilepsy," Katrina said. "If anything, I believe this would be a far safer option for him without many of the side effects he currently experiences." Babies with Ohtahara syndrome make very little developmental progress and often die within a couple of years. One medication Angus took saw him become void of all emotion. "He doesn't cry or smile anymore," Katrina said. She said while she understood the need for legislation governing the production or importation of medical cannabis, she did not agree with the debate on its usefulness as a treatment. "It is a medically accepted treatment in many parts of the world to control pain for cancer sufferers, spasticity in multiple sclerosis and epileptic seizures," she said. "The doubt that is cast over medical cannabis as an accepted treatment by our doctors only clouds the issue. "More importantly, it potentially further delays its safe introduction and provides yet another hurdle - of the general public's opinion - that patients and carers have to battle." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt