Source: Washington Post (DC) Contact: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Pubdate: Mon, 28 Sep 1998 SCIENCE NOTEBOOK Compiled from reports by Curt Suplee, John Schwartz and Rob Stein. BIOLOGY: Taking a Leaf From Marijuana's Effect New research suggests that scientists may be able to develop a powerful new painkiller modeled on the active ingredient in marijuana. In rats, a drug that mimics delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol, the main active ingredient in marijuana, deadens pain like morphine, researchers at the University of California at San Francisco showed. The findings indicate that marijuana-like drugs kill pain without producing the side effects of morphine. "Given their unique side-effect profile (for example, cannabinoids increase appetite, whereas opioids can cause nausea and respiratory depression), cannabinoids may be useful in improving the treatment of pain," Ian D. Meng and colleagues write in the Sept. 24 Nature. Rats given a synthetic cannabinoid kept their tails near a heat source longer than rats that did not get the drug. And when the researchers shut down a region of the rats' brain known as the rostral ventromedial medulla, which is affected by drugs like morphine, they no longer had an insensitivity to pain. Copyright 1998 The Washington Post Company - --- Checked-by: Rich O'Grady