Pubdate: Sat, 25 Jul 2015 Source: Post-Star, The ( NY) Copyright: 2015 Glens Falls Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.poststar.com/app/contact/?form=letter Website: http://www.poststar.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1068 Author: Donald Bradley, The Kansas City Star US POLICY KEEPS MEDICAL MARIJUANA RESEARCH FUNDING LOW KANSAS CITY, Mo. Certain chemicals in marijuana may kill cancer cells, shrink tumors and prevent the formation of blood vessels that feed tumors. That's the National Cancer Institute reporting findings from preclinical trials - the kind of research that typically leads to more in-depth testing. But nearly a half-century ago the folks who write the checks for the cancer institute - the U.S. government - proclaimed marijuana a stoner-only drug and stamped it Schedule I, lumping it with heroin and LSD. That early war-on-drugs salvo cut the world's biggest funder out of medical marijuana research. Had the U.S. cut checks back then to turn the big research labs loose we might know by now that marijuana is nothing more than a good buzz, as promising as the smoke that spills out of Jeff Spicoli's van. Or, who knows? Marijuana-based drugs could be improving lives today. Maybe even saving some. Because while America was just saying no, research - much of it from other countries - has shown that marijuana derivatives called cannabinoids and cannabidiol can trigger the body's natural defenses to fight things such as cancer, Alzheimer's, multiple sclerosis, diabetes, Crohn's disease and epilepsy. A Canadian study concluded cannabis reduced pain and improved sleep for sufferers of neuropathic pain. NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell announced the league is monitoring research being done in Israel on marijuana being used to treat traumatic brain injury. Health organizations, such as the American Cancer Society, increasingly say the Schedule I label stands in the way of scientific research. But the federal government continues to stick to its Nixon-era stance - - even when calls for change come from its own agencies. "That's my definition of chaos," said J. Michael Bostwick, a psychiatrist at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota., and author of "Blurred Boundaries: The Therapeutics and Politics of Medical Marijuana." "The federal government needs to change its position so this research can take place," Bostwick said. So it's a catch-22: marijuana being on the Schedule I list impedes research that could show it doesn't belong there. Who can change this? That's another fight. Earlier this year, then-U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder called on Congress to do it. Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn., quickly reminded Holder that the attorney general already had the authority to reclassify marijuana. The easiest route would be for the Drug Enforcement Administration to act. But in 2011, the agency rejected a petition, filed nearly a decade before, to do so after hearing opposition from the Department of Health and Human Services. It appears now that change could come from Congress, where bills have been introduced in both the House and Senate. In March, Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, a Republican presidential candidate with a libertarian bent, joined Democratic Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York and Cory Booker of New Jersey in introducing legislation that would change marijuana to a Schedule II drug. That would mean the federal government recognizes its medical value but that the drug can be abused, much like prescription opiates. The 23 states that have approved medical marijuana would also be protected from federal intervention. The Obama administration has made it clear that it would let those states play by their own rules. But his successor is not obligated to do likewise. More states could soon join the 23 - even deep-red places like Kansas and Missouri are taking a look. Pot bills went further in Kansas this year than they ever have. Missouri last year passed a Republican-pushed bill legalizing a low-THC cannabidiol for treatment of severe epileptic seizures. There's still plenty of opposition. Opponents typically argue that conventional drugs are safer and that "medical marijuana" is simply an incremental ploy to get recreational pot. Indeed, in California and elsewhere it's become common for doctors to set up shop in or next to dispensaries specifically to diagnose dubious conditions like pain from old high school football injuries. "You're not seeing a lot of medical support for marijuana and these state legislatures are giving pot a free rein," said Eric Voth, a Topeka, Kansas, physician and longtime marijuana opponent who heads the Institute on Global Drug Policy and speaks on behalf of the national Drug Free America. A common volley from advocates is that doctors who oppose marijuana research are probably trying to protect the prescription drug business. But if the government should loosen its grip, Mahmoud A. ElSohly would instantly become the country's best-known pot farmer. He's got 12 acres up and growing in the middle of campus at the University of Mississippi in Oxford, where the spring was warm and rainy. A scientist and professor, ElSohly heads the federal government's marijuana patch. His crop is where any research project approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration would get its plants. Cannabinoids and cannabidiol (CBD) - what do they do? Scientists say humans have a unique communication system in the brain. When receptors are triggered by cannabinoids, they transmit signals throughout the body. This "endocannabinoid system" provides the infrastructure for marijuana's effect on humans. Sometimes that's simply the euphoric feeling of getting high. But researchers increasingly find that those chemical charges may go through the body and kill cancer cells, ease neuropathic pain, calm seizures from epilepsy, help control blood sugar, relieve glaucoma's intraocular pressure and perform a host of other benefits. All this has changed minds - perhaps most famously Sanjay Gupta, CNN's chief medical correspondent and a neurosurgeon. For years an opponent of medical marijuana, Gupta in August of 2013 apologized for misleading the country. "We have been terribly and systematically misled for nearly 70 years in the United States, and I apologize for my own role in that," he said. The new information has also led to a changed political climate in which polls now show most Americans favoring legalization of marijuana. The findings prompt even longtime marijuana opponents to acknowledge their promise. Voth says that something called "Charlotte's Web," a cannabidiol with little of the buzz component of marijuana, appears to be effective in treating children with epilepsy. But he and others reject many other claims about marijuana. In December, Samuel T. Wilkinson at Yale University's School of Medicine released a study that showed treatment of PTSD suffered when patients smoke marijuana, although some patients swear by it. Wilkinson previously released a paper that linked marijuana use to schizophrenia. And while the American Glaucoma Society says that marijuana eases intraocular pressure, the relief lasts only three hours. So patients need to smoke several times a day. The society advises against marijuana use as a treatment. Hard to imagine the FDA would ever approve "crude marijuana" - joints and bong hits that put smoke in the lungs. But derivatives can come in many smokeless forms where the components and dosages can be better controlled. That said, many patients would say don't cut short the healing power of a good doobie. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom