Pubdate: Mon, 18 Jan 2016 Source: Moose Jaw Times-Herald (CN SN) Copyright: 2016 The Moose Jaw Times-Herald Group Inc. Contact: http://www.mjtimes.sk.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2154 Author: Theresa Simon-Worobec Page: A1 'MARIJUANA SAVED MY LIFE' SPECIAL REPORT: This is Part I of a three-part series that will delve into one local man's usage of medical marijuana after he sustained serious injuries. It hasn't been an easy road for the husband and father of two over the past couple of years. He has battled a stigma, lost his job and had been popping all kinds of pills until he found medical marijuana. A Moose Jaw man is frustrated with what he claims is an outdated stigma against the medicine he uses - marijuana. Chris Kuntz, a husband and father of two, has been using doctor prescribed medical marijuana since last June after undergoing a combined laminectomy and discectomy to repair two herniated discs and an annular tear in his spine. On Dec. 10, 2014, Kuntz was on his way to work when his back suddenly gave out and he fell in his doorway. He temporarily lost the feeling in his legs and was rendered bedridden for two days until he went to the doctor who prescribed pain medication and ordered an MRI. He ended up falling again on Jan. 6, once again losing feeling in both legs. Before his surgery on March 9, 2015, Kuntz says he was prescribed "pills, pills, pills, and more pills to deal with the pain." At one point, possessing 16 different medications, including Tylenol 3, Lyrica, Celebrex, and Dilauded. After the surgery Kuntz says he immediately felt better, but after eight days the pain was back. This time he said it was even worse than before. An MRI showed surgical swelling and a possible infection in the spinal chord. Once again, a myriad of pharmaceuticals were prescribed. "It was up to about 40-50 pills a day at the worst part before I went on the fentanyl patch," said Kuntz. "That would have been for a few months. Most of them were prescribed to combat the side effects of the pain medication and the side effects of everything else." Kuntz says those side effects included weight gain, insomnia, constipation, diarrhea, vomiting, nausea, dizziness, muscle spasms, high blood pressure, and low blood pressure. Even Aleve, a common over-the-counter pain reliever, would cause Kuntz to vomit blood after just a few days of continuous use. His doctor ended up prescribing a fentanyl patch for him, a highly addictive opiate pain reliever only prescribed in dire situations. "I was on the fentanyl patch," said Kuntz. "It's pretty much death. Every three days I was changing the patch and it was horrible. I thought I was going to die. I couldn't eat, I never slept. I was on a constant heroine trip. It's one of the only medications that you can get that can actually kill you, and they give it out like candy." Kuntz's well-being deteriorated to such a point that his wife Amanda suggested he try marijuana. "I understand you don't want to do that," Amanda says she told Chris. "But come on, let's just try it." "I was at the point where I was basically a drug addict anyway," said Chris. "So I thought, well, adjust my morals a little bit." The Kuntzs say they went to their doctor and followed all of the guidelines set out by the Medical Marijuana Alliance and Resources (MMAR) to acquire the controversial medicine. "Any medication has got a lot of side effects," said Kuntz's doctor, Hany Youseff. "He had side effects and there was no improvement for his pain. That effected his work massively and his family life." Youseff said that medical marijuana was prescribed to Kuntz as a last resort, as it is with all his other patients. "We have guidelines," Youseff explained. "We don't just go with what the patient asks for. We go with individual medical conditions. If everything else fails, then we resort to medical marijuana." Since obtaining a prescription for three grams a day, Kuntz says his quality of life has greatly improved. "It's really been life changing," he says. "I won't take anything else. I won't do it. I don't want to be a zombie. I've tried in between to take an Aleve and it really works, but it kicks the s-out of me, so the side effects are not worth what it does for me. "There's anger and all these things that come out. You're not you. I spent three months in bed, and most of that time I just couldn't get out of bed because of all the medication. But now I can do push-ups, I can do all these things now that a year ago I couldn't and I thoroughly believe that cannabis was the deciding factor." To help the Kuntz's during this difficult time please visit http://gofundme.com/chriskuntzfamily - --- MAP posted-by: Matt