Pubdate: Wed, 15 Jul 2015 Source: Ukiah Daily Journal, The (CA) Copyright: 2015 The Ukiah Daily Journal Contact: http://www.ukiahdailyjournal.com/feedback Website: http://www.ukiahdailyjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/581 Author: Carole Brodsky 'UNITED' STATE OF CANNABIS: CONSULTING COMPANY POINTS TO PATIENT SUCCESSES Editor's note: This is the third in a series of articles covering the establishment of one of the first tribal cannabis farming projects in the United States. The Pinoleville Pomo Nation is providing readers of The Ukiah Daily Journal with a first-hand, exclusive look at the people, the processes and the philosophical underpinnings of this groundbreaking medical cannabis project. "All of the founders of United Cannabis have a fondness for cannabis, because one way or another, we started out as patients," explains Chad Ruby, COO of the United Cannabis Corporation. Ruby explains the origin of the company that is providing the expertise and consultation for the production of medical cannabis products - soon to be managed and distributed by the Pinoleville Pomo Nation's Medical Cannabis Collective, just north of Ukiah. "The story of United Cannabis begins with the founding of River Rock," says Ruby. River Rock is a Colorado-based cannabis growing, processing and dispensing operation - the brainchild of longtime friends and partners Tony Verzura and Earnest Blackmon. Injuries from a car accident and a subsequent addiction to painkillers motivated Verzura, the United Cannabis technical officer, to devise cannabis solutions for his chronic pain. "Being patients fueled our motivation. I blew out the anterior cruciate ligaments in my knees and had herniated discs in my lumbar spine," says Verzura. "We were patients trying to help patients." In 2009, Tony Verzura and a handful of partners founded River Rock, a medical cannabis dispensary. The project started humbly in a detached garage where three "grow" lights and six cannabis plants served five patients. Six years later, the flagship operation included an 18,000 square-foot greenhouse, 9,000 square feet of indoor cultivation, the tracking of over 200 cannabis strains from seed to sale and service to over 100,000 patients and customers. River Rock and its affiliate partners garnered 30 local, national and international awards for a variety of cannabis products. Blackmon and Verzura pushed forward and with their network of associates developed proprietary organic cannabis products for patients under the global identity they named United Cannabis Corporation. Blackmon continued on to become River Rock's master grower. The focus on medical cannabis continued to be the team's raison d'etre. The United Cannabis Corporation was formed to facilitate the development of a medicinal cannabis product line and patient-tracking software program that gathers data and guides physicians toward the provision of optimum care. "First we looked at science, then software," says Ruby. "United Cannabis is a bio-cannabinoid technology company, built on scientific research, product development, and implementation of a proprietary cannabinoid therapy program," says Verzura. A powerhouse of medical and scientific advisers was enlisted, who have helped standardize and perfect the company's medical products and protocols. Brent Reynolds Ph.D. is United Cannabis' chief medical adviser. He co-discovered the existence of stem cells in the adult mammalian brain, resulting in clinical trials for treatment of diseases such as spinal cord injury, stroke, ALS and pediatric disorders. In 2008, Reynolds was recruited to the department of Neurosurgery at the University of Florida, where he studied and developed treatment approaches for aggressive juvenile and adult brain cancers. Reynolds and his colleagues are investigating the treatment and management of cancer as a chronic disease. He has authored more than 60 publications with several manuscripts receiving over 1,000 citations, and as an inventor has 18 granted patents. United Cannabis' medical director Dr. Barry Bialek received his degree from George Washington University in 1985. He worked as the clinical assistant professor for the University of Arizona's department of family medicine. He was the lieutenant commander in the Commissioned Corps Indian Health Services for the United States Public Health Services, serving as a family and emergency medicine physician for the Fort Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona. Bialek was an academic appointee for the Engineering for Developing Communities projects in Israel, Nepal and China. He is the associate adjunct professor in Engineering and Applied Sciences at the University of Colorado, and is a member of the university's Medical Cannabis Research Group. His Colorado practice specializes in medicinal cannabis-based family medicine. Dr. Bialek presides over the United Cannabis ACT Now Program, is the project's Native American medical liaison and the assistant medical director overseeing clinical human observational studies. "Our research team dedicated all their energy to patients. We are trying to help patients supplement their endocannabinoid system by using the most optimum cannabis medicine and nonabrasive delivery methods available," Verzura explains. "Every human is born with an endocannabinoid system that controls the communication between the central nervous system and the immune system, similar to traffic lights regulating the flow of cars. Its job is to keep the system in homeostasis," he explains. Verzura compares endocannabinoid receptors to familiar computer devices that utilize plugs designed with multiple male-to-female interlocking holes and pins. "If you're missing 10 out of 100 pins, your device will still conduct electricity, but not everything will fire correctly. Traditional medicine ignores those broken 10 pins and treats patients as if the missing pins aren't there. Cannabis therapy fine-tunes the body toward homeostasis. It interacts with the body's signaling system to more completely communicate what's needed." Verzura and his team have witnessed countless reversals of what appeared to be hopeless medical situations. "We never use the word 'cure' but we have had patients with metastatic Stage IV liver and breast cancer who had run out of options, and a year later, after following our protocol are still testing as cancer-free," says Verzura. "The observational data is taking us toward better results, even though ironically, it's still virtually impossible to keep a bank account in this industry," he concludes. "We're not lobbyists. We're not politicians. I'm a grass-roots person. My goal was to get medical products into the United Cannabis program. Once you have 20 people in remission, you are compelled to go to the next level - to help more people." Next: : Taking the "Harm" out of "Pharm:" United Cannabis Corporation creates high-grade standardized medicine and a patient tracking system for the Pinoleville Cannabis project. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom