Positive Vibrations Blog

Marijuana in Vegatative cycle.
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County Commissioners Meeting Tomorrow

County Commissioners Meeting Tomorrow

 

Blog

County Commissioners Fumble the Ball

Medical Marijuana Dispensary Website. 

Hello again, Greg here, we have got a problem with the County Commissioners setting regulations to shut down a majority of the Medical Marijuana Grows in Coos County, we must rally the troops and get these gentlemen the correct information to make a better informed decision. NOW!!!. We the people have a bound duty to fight this travesty against our right to grow our own medicine. This takes away the State given right to medicate and grow our own medicine. I will have more information as it comes available. Call Your County Commissioner NOW!!! and give them your concerns.

Below are the County Commissioners email and contact phone numbers,  Call Now and leave a message

County Commision regulations
County Commision regulations
Call Commissioner
Robert “Bob” Main at
(541) 396-7540
Email: bmain@co.coos.or.us
Call Commissioner
John Sweet at
(541) 396-7541
Email: jsweet@co.coos.or.us
Call Commissioner
Melissa Cribbins at
(541) 396-7539

Email: mcribbins@co.coos.or.us
Association of Oregon Counties:

   — Public Lands and Natural Resources
   — Public Safety Steering Committee
Coos County Weed Board
Council of Forest Trust Land Counties
O&C Counties – Board of Directors
Oregon Coastal Zone Management Assoc.
Watershed Councils
Coquille Rotary Club
Bay Area Sportsman Association

Belloni’s Boys Ranch
Local Government Advisory Committee
South Coast Development Corporation
SW Oregon Area Comm. on Transportation
Coos County Urban Renewal Agency
Oregon Solutions Steering Committee–            State
WOAH Community Advisory Council
SCCF

CCD Business Development Corporation
Rural Development Initiatives-Vice Chair
Coos County Urban Renewal Agency
Bay Area Chamber of Commerce Board
Small Business Development Center
Energy Trust of Oregon
Land Conservation and Development
Commission Board
Association of Oregon Counties
— Legislative Committee
Energy, Environment and
Land Use – Co-Chair
United Way of Southwestern Oregon Board
Western Oregon Advanced Health
(WOAH) Board
National Association of Counties
Energy, Environment and
Land Use Committee

 

Blog

Grand Opening was a success

Hello again, and Thank You to all of you that showed up at the Grand Opening, and thank you for showing support for your newest Dispensary in North Bend. The Grand Opening was a complete success and we met alot of wonderful people from the community and out of area also.

As you may have noticed we are just carrying Flower at this time, I will be adding alot of inventory in the coming weeks so please stop by again and see what we have added.

I am carrying a variety of glass pipes at the dispensary and keeping the prices low to better serve the community and their needs.

I am in the process of adding the strains we have in stock to the website and will add all of our inventory in the near future, to better serve my patients and keep them informed.

You can call anytime at the dispensary (541-808-9230) and I will be here to answer questions, if I dont know the answers I will research and find the answers for you.

We are in the process of engaging with a Doctor for getting and renewing your card, that will be coming soon for those of you like myself who need to renew you OMMP card.

Here are the Strains we have now and I will update on the website regularly.  Thank you and see you soon     Greg

Black Widow
Black Widow Test results.
Creese & Chong
Creese & Chong test results
Lambs Bread Diesel
LSD test results
Shiskaberry
Shiskaberry test results
Mega Jackpot
Monthly Newsletter

Grand Opening for Positive Vibrations Medical Marijuana in North Bend

Medical Marijuana Dispensary.

Hi, this is Greg and here is the ad we placed in the South Coast Shopper (the local trade paper) , It will come out on the 18th of June, if you dont get it delivered to your location (it’s free by the way and online also), then just mention you saw the ad on this website for your free gram or blunt with your OMMP card of course. We will give out tickets for a drawing at 5pm on Saturday June 20 2015 (You do not have to be present to win) and we will call the winners after 5pm. we will have many strains available for purchase and have some local vendors there also. So come by for visit and check out our shop.  Thanks and see you there   Greg

Grand Opening Positive Vibrations
Grand Opening for Positive Vibrations Medical Marijuana.
Blog

Opening Soon

We have gotten the Occupancy Permit from the City of North Bend for the Dispensary and are working with the OMMP inspectors to renew my license, I will be open for business 6/15/15 barring any further complications. I will update this information when I talk to the OMMP inspectors and have a definitive date.  Thanks for your patience   Greg @ Positive Vibrations.

Monthly Newsletter

Prepping for Marijuana Legalization

Prepping for Pot

Read the entire article from The Source Weekly

As legalization approaches, Bendites consider the implications

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Matthew Grimes

Prepping for Marijuana Legalization

Were the legalization of weed a pregnancy, with its conception marked during the month before the election and its due date July 1, the day that pot is officially legal in Oregon, we’d be entering the third trimester. The nursery walls would be painted, the crib built, the cabinet filled with diapers and onesies.

But how is Bend preparing for the stork’s pending delivery?

It depends where you look. Preparations range from proactive to pensive to practically unconcerned.

The City: Laissez-faire

Though Measure 91 did not create an allowance for cities to impose their own taxes on recreational marijuana, many municipalities passed taxing ordinances anyway. The hope being that the State Legislature will grandfather them in. In fact, according to theOregonian, some 70 towns and cities—including Redmond, La Pine and Madras—passed a weed tax before election day and are now crossing their fingers that the state legislature will let them collect some 15 percent of marijuana revenues.

But Bend was not one of those cities—and may miss out on additional funding for its police department and schools if the state grandfathers in pre-election local taxes.

Under the structure laid out by Measure 91, an excise tax is to be paid at the grower level to the tune of $35 an ounce for flower, $10 an ounce for leaves, and $5 per immature plant. According to the voter’s pamphlet, that’s estimated to bring in anywhere from $17 million to $40 million annually. The bulk of those revenues (40 percent) will go to the Common School Fund. The remainder will go to Mental Health, Alcoholism and Drug Services (20 percent), State Police (15 percent), city enforcement of the measure (10 percent), county enforcement of the measure (10 percent) and the Oregon Health Authority For Alcohol and Drug Abuse Prevention (5 percent).

Still, just because Bend City Council chose not to pursue a local pot tax doesn’t mean the City has been ignoring legalization.

“The City has been aware of this upcoming change and discussing it for some time,” says City Manager Eric King. He goes on to explain that city councilors and staff including attorneys, human resources, the planning department and Bend Police officials have been engaged in research and attended conferences on the subject.

Yet despite all this “education,” City staff and Council have declined to take any specific actions and instead are taking a hands-off approach.

“There has been no Council direction to develop any regulations on marijuana,” King says. “Bend’s not working on establishing a marijuana tax or any type of ban. The Council has reiterated that the State has authority on this issue. OLCC [Oregon Liquor Control Commission] is the responsible agent.”

King does say, though, that there are some areas that will require clarification, such as driving under the influence and zoning issues.

“The main concern the City has is that there is a lack of clarity about what constitutes impaired driving. There’s no meter or blood test, so it’ll have to be observed,” he says, adding that there are currently a “handful” of police officers trained in recognizing when someone is driving under the influence of marijuana.

When it comes to land use, the City is waiting on the State Legislature to fill in some of the blanks in the ballot measure—specifically with regard to the zoning and density of commercial marijuana business. Once it does, staff will have a better idea of how to manage zoning and other issues related to the establishment of retail operations.

“At this time, medical marijuana establishments are treated like medical clinics, and allowed in commercial zones. State regulations require they have 1,000-foot buffers from schools,” King explains. “We expect there will be similar regulations from the state for recreational marijuana establishments, and we can address their locations in our zoning code.”

But, on the whole, he says he feels the City is on track, and prepared for the legalization of recreational pot, even though many cities in Oregon are pressuring the legislature for greater local control.

Tourism: Not Gonna Cultivate It!

Once retail shops start to pop up, and perhaps even sooner, Oregon will no doubt become an increasingly attractive destination for weed lovers. And Bend—with its already vibrant medicinal marijuana market, high density of reggae-loving snowboarders, and established craft beer scene—seems prime for weed tourism.

But if a Weed Walk or Pot Path are destined to follow in the footsteps of the popularAle Trail, Visit Bend hasn’t started drafting that. Instead, the tourism agency’s Executive Director Doug La Placa is taking a wait-and-see approach.

“It’s difficult to predict what, if any, impact the legalization of recreational marijuana will have on Bend’s tourism industry,” La Placa explains. “My initial thought is that there are other cities in Oregon that are much better positioned to capitalize on the potential of weed tourism.”

Bend, he says, already has “dozens of other compelling reasons to visit”—such as the craft beer culture and strong summer and winter sports scenes. And while tourism agencies don’t typically turn away potential visitors, La Placa posits that weed tourism is too risky.

“I don’t think the inevitable controversy that would erupt over a publicly-funded marijuana tourism marketing campaign is worth the likely negligible economic upside for the industry,” La Placa explains. “If another tourism marketing organization feels differently, they can cultivate the opportunity. Visit Bend isn’t going to touch it.”

He says he recognizes that marijuana tourism can serve as a source of economic stimulus, particularly for cities without another tourist attraction. For Bend, however, La Placa says it’s not the city’s best bet.

“At this point, we have no plans to promote Bend as a recreational marijuana destination,” La Placa affirms. “We don’t have any moral or ethical problem with it, we just don’t see it as a leading competitive advantage for Bend’s tourism industry.”

Grow Shops: Ready for business

Bend has no shortage of garden centers, indoor grow shops and hydroponic outfitters. And while they are typically discreet about the extent to which their customers may be growing pot, as opposed to heirloom tomatoes, it’s no secret that these shops have what the small-scale grower needs.

“Definitely a large percentage—possibly 80 percent or more—of our business is related to marijuana growing, but most people are pretty quiet about what they are growing,” says Corey Spurlock with Green Leaf Garden Center.

He adds that while Green Leaf doesn’t current provide specific advice on growing marijuana—after all, many of the shop’s products could be used to grow garden veggies, flowers, or indoor houseplants—he sees that changing with the legalization of recreational marijuana.

“I see our business growing substantially with the upcoming change in laws. We are already getting calls and questions from people wanting to buy equipment they will need to get started with the allowed four plants,” Spurlock says. “While we do have some larger commercial customers, the majority of our business is from smaller, personal sized gardens by people that are growing presumably for themselves and/or their OMMP [Oregon Medical Marijuana Program] card holders.”

To cater to those individuals interested in growing for personal recreational use, Green Leaf has already started advertising a starter kit of sorts, with everything a new grower would need to get growing—including a small grow tent, ballast, light, ventilation, timer, and environmental controller.

In addition to bundling supplies, Spurlock says Green Leaf plans to offer classes for folks just getting started.

“We will be planning these types of activities in the future as needed, depending on the influx of new growers,” he says. “Our staff is very educated on plant growth in general and the basics apply to all plants, not just marijuana.”

While Spurlock expects that more grow shops will emerge to take advantage of this growing industry, he says he welcomes competition and hopes that legalization will help smaller local businesses thrive.

“Personally, the biggest challenge that I foresee is the stigma that marijuana is a bad evil drug—the reefer madness mentality.  That and the fear of it still being federally illegal,” Spurlock says. “As far as opportunities, I think the sky is the limit. It is the fastest growing industry in the United States right now.”

And while he says he’s not much of a pot-smoker himself, he hopes that legalization will inspire a broader conversation on not only the medicinal, but also the economic benefits of marijuana.

“I’d like people to have an open mind regarding the future of marijuana,” he says.

Labs: Cannibis Chemistry

Whether recreational marijuana stokes the fire of Bend’s tourism industry, it’s likely to turn up the Bunsen burner on emerging cannabis testing labs, like Bend-basedCannAlytical Research.

The local lab currently tests cannabis and its derivatives for potency, strain and the presence of undesirable elements such as microbes, pesticides, and residual solvent. These testing services are required under Oregon’s medical marijuana law, and it’s expected that the State Legislature will enact similar testing requirements for recreational pot.

“If recreational cannabis is required to be tested, and we certainly believe it should, then yes, of course, we expect an increase in business,” says Carlos Cummings, CannAlytical Research’s owner. “We also expect many new entries to this burgeoning market, including new labs.”

In anticipation of increasing demand for marijuana testing services, CannAlytical Research is increasing its staff and upgrading its laboratory.

“We have hired a scientist, we’re currently interviewing analytical chemists, and we have a new HPLC [high performance liquid chromatography], to better and more efficiently analyze and research cannabis in our lab,” Cummings says.

That said, Cummings expects only a slight bump in business on July 1, anticipating that the real action will take place sometime in 2016.

“It will take the OLCC and the State quite a bit longer to write the laws that will govern recreational cannabis and for the recreational market to become established,” Cummings explains. “We do not expect a significant increase in testing until perhaps after recreational dispensaries are actually open.”

Still, he is looking to the future now. He anticipates new labs opening up and the stricter regulation of the credentials of testing staff, such as requiring lab supervisors to hold advanced degrees in chemistry.

“The main challenge is controlling the burgeoning recreational market and protecting the established medical program,” Cummings adds. “Legalization has so many potential benefits, I almost don’t know where to begin; taxes for our community and social programs, awareness, education, research, and understanding of a miraculous plant, financial gain across our economy and classes, better soils, air, water, well being and health, and the cure for cancer, etc.”

While the jury is still out on if and how medical and recreational establishments might interact with one another, he says he wants to be sure that recreational weed enhances rather than threatens medical marijuana.

“As cannabis regulation moves forward at the recreational level, the OMMP program should also be strengthened,” he says. “Patients should have access to medicine-grade cannabis for their ailments and diseases.”

Schools and Parents:

Let’s talk about drugs

While much of the preparations for legal weed are focused on the business side of the equation, some are gearing up for a defensive effort aimed at keeping marijuana out of the hands of children.

In some ways, it’s a continuation of the work already being done. The fact that weed will be legal for adults 18 and over isn’t likely to change the core message from schools and drug awareness campaigners—that drug and alcohol use are illegal for minors and come with real risks.

“The District does not foresee significant changes in the educational content or approach to drug education based on the legalization of marijuana,” explains incoming Bend-La Pine superintendent Shay Mikalson. “Currently, education focuses on the harmful effects of a number of drugs and substances, legal and illegal, from a health and wellness standpoint.”

He points out that the curriculum currently covers the “harmful effects and dangers” of alcohol, which is, of course, legal for adults over 21. When students return to school post-legalization in the fall, however, marijuana will likely be highlighted.

“As marijuana becomes legalized, and access to it changes as edibles and other forms continue to grow in their accessibility, it is likely that teachers will seek to educate students on the harmful effects and dangers of this soon-to-be-legal drug,” Mikalson explains.

But it’s not just children that are being primed for increased weed education. At the OLCC’s marijuana listening session in Bend, a number of attendees emphasized the importance of educating parents so they can help keep pot out of their kids’ hands.

“Education is paramount, especially of parents,” says Barbara Stoefen, who serves on the board of the Shared Future Coalition and speaks in local schools on preventing and responding to drug addiction. “Parents need to fully understand the risks that marijuana poses for their children, and that it is indeed addictive for some.”

And while she believes that the drug education in local middle and high schools is adequate, she says it could go further toward providing youth with concrete tools to avoid drugs.

“We tell kids not to engage in certain activities and behaviors, but don’t offer them the necessary tools. ‘Just say no’ doesn’t work and is not a solution,” Stoefen says. “Another coalition of which I’m a board member, the Alliance for Substance Abuse Prevention, has a youth advisory committee that is putting the finishing touches on a video to teach drug refusal skills to teens. We are also in the early stages of developing a website exclusively for teens.”

She says she hopes these projects will be up and running by the time school starts again in the fall. Another thing Stoefen, whose own daughter battled with addiction, would like to see is more resources for students who are experiencing addiction personally, or being impacted by the addiction of a family member.

“Drug abuse and addiction exists in more families than most people realize, and children raised in these homes are highly stressed and at greater risk for addiction themselves,” she explains. “It would be incredible to have weekly support groups for at-risk students, providing an opportunity for them to develop coping skills.”

Ultimately, Stoefen says she does not believe Bend is ready for legal weed, but has some ideas about how it could get there. While it’s impossible to anticipate every possible outcome, she says, more time and resources could go into developing a solid, community- based plan.

“There is no question this new law will change Bend, and it will change Oregon. Are we ready? Oh my goodness, no. The logistics of implementing a new law like this, and the ripple effects, will be far reaching,” Stoefen explains. “We as a city need to be vigilant about doing the best job possible with implementation. Much will be required of our City leaders and a task force could prove very helpful.”

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The Brain’s Own Marijuana

The Brain’s Own Marijuana

by Roger A. Nicoll and Bradley N. Alger
A Peek Into The Endocannabinoid System
A Peek Into The Endocannabinoid System

 

Marijuana is a drug with a mixed history. Mention it to one person, and it will conjure images of potheads lost in a spaced-out stupor. To another, it may represent relaxation, a slowing down of modern madness. To yet another, marijuana means hope for cancer patients suffering from the debilitating nausea of chemotherapy, or it is the promise of relief from chronic pain. The drug is all these things and more, for its history is a long one, spanning millennia and continents. It is also something everyone is familiar with, whether they know it or not. Everyone grows a form of the drug, regardless of their political leanings or recreational proclivities. That is because the brain makes its own marijuana, natural compounds called endocannabinoids (after the plant’s formal name, Cannabis sativa).

The study of endocannabinoids in recent years has led to exciting discoveries. By examining these substances, researchers have exposed an entirely new signaling system in the brain: a way that nerve cells communicate that no one anticipated even 15 years ago. Fully understanding this signaling system could have far-reaching implications. The details appear to hold a key to devising treatments for anxiety, pain, nausea, obesity, brain injury and many other medical problems. Ultimately such treatments could be tailored precisely so that they would not initiate the unwanted side effects produced by marijuana itself.

 

A Peek Into The Endocannabinoid System
A Peek Into The Endocannabinoid System

 

A Checkered Past

Marijuana and its various alter egos, such as bhang and hashish, are among the most widely used psychoactive drugs in the world. How the plant has been used varies by culture. The ancient Chinese knew of marijuana’s pain-relieving and mind-altering effects, yet it was not widely employed for its psychoactive properties; instead it was cultivated as hemp for the manufacture of rope and fabric. Likewise, the ancient Greeks and Romans used hemp to make rope and sails. In some other places, however, marijuana’s intoxicating properties became important. In India, for example, the plant was incorporated into religious rituals. During the Middle Ages, its use was common in Arab lands; in 15th-century Iraq it was used to treat epilepsy; in Egypt it was primarily consumed as an inebriant. After Napoleon’s occupation of Egypt, Europeans began using the drug as an intoxicant. During the slave trade, it was transported from Africa to Mexico, the Caribbean and South America.

Marijuana gained a following in the U.S. only relatively recently. During the second half of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th, cannabis was freely available without a prescription for a wide range of ailments, including migraine and ulcers. Immigrants from Mexico introduced it as a recreational drug to New Orleans and other large cities, where it became popular among jazz musicians. By the 1930s it had fallen into disrepute, and an intense lobbying campaign demonized “reefer madness.” In 1937 the U.S. Congress, against the advice of the American Medical Association, passed the Marijuana Tax Act, effectively banning use of the drug by making it expensive and difficult to obtain. Ever since, marijuana has remained one of the most controversial drugs in American society. Despite efforts to change its status, it remains federally classified as a Schedule 1 drug, along with heroin and LSD, considered dangerous and without utility.

Millions of people smoke or ingest marijuana for its intoxicating effects, which are subjective and often described as resembling an alcoholic “high.” It is estimated that approximately 30 percent of the U.S. population older than 12 have tried marijuana, but only about 5 percent are current users. Large doses cause hallucinations in some individuals but simply trigger sleep in others. The weed impairs short-term memory and cognition and adversely affects motor coordination, although these setbacks seem to be reversible once the drug has been purged from the body. Smoking marijuana also poses health risks that resemble those of smoking tobacco.

On the other hand, the drug has clear medicinal benefits. Marijuana alleviates pain and anxiety. It can prevent the death of injured neurons. It suppresses vomiting and enhances appetite–useful features for patients suffering the severe weight loss that can result from chemotherapy.

 

 

Marijuana and the Brain
Marijuana and the Brain

Finding the Responsible Agent

Figuring out how the drug exerts these myriad effects has taken a long time. In 1964, after nearly a century of work by many individuals, Raphael Mechoulam of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem identified delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) as the compound that accounts for virtually all the pharmacological activity of marijuana. The next step was to identify the receptor or receptors to which THC was binding.

Receptors are small proteins embedded in the membranes of all cells, including neurons, and when specific molecules bind to them–fitting like one puzzle piece into another– changes in the cell occur. Some receptors have water-filled pores or channels that permit chemical ions to pass into or out of the cell. These kinds of receptors work by changing the relative voltage inside and outside the cell. Other receptors are not channels but are coupled to specialized proteins called G-proteins. These G-protein-coupled receptors represent a large family that set in motion a variety of biochemical signaling cascades within cells, often resulting in changes in ion channels.

In 1988 Allyn C. Howlett and her colleagues at St. Louis University attached a radioactive tag to a chemical derivative of THC and watched where the compound went in rats’ brains. They discovered that it attached itself to what came to be called the cannabinoid receptor, also known as CB1. Based on this finding and on work by Miles Herkenham of the National Institutes of Health, Lisa Matsuda, also at the NIH, cloned the CB1 receptor. The importance of CB1 in the action of THC was proved when two researchers working independently–Catherine Ledent of the Free University of Brussels and Andreas Zimmer of the Laboratory of Molecular Neurobiology at the University of Bonn–bred mice that lacked this receptor. Both investigators found that THC had virtually no effect when administered to such a mouse: the compound had nowhere to bind and hence could not trigger any activity. (Another cannabinoid receptor, CB2, was later discovered; it operates only outside the brain and spinal cord and is involved with the immune system.)

As researchers continued to study CB1, they learned that it was one of the most abundant G-protein coupled receptors in the brain. It has its highest densities in the cerebral cortex, hippocampus, hypothalamus, cerebellum, basal ganglia, brain stem, spinal cord and amygdala. This distribution explains marijuana’s diverse effects. Its psychoactive power comes from its action in the cerebral cortex. Memory impairment is rooted in the hippocampus, a structure essential for memory formation. The drug causes motor dysfunction by acting on movement control centers of the brain. In the brain stem and spinal cord, it brings about the reduction of pain; the brain stem also controls the vomiting reflex. The hypothalamus is involved in appetite, the amygdala in emotional responses. Marijuana clearly does so much because it acts everywhere.

Over time, details about CB1’s neuronal location emerged as well. Elegant studies by Tamás F. Freund of the Institute of Experimental Medicine at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in Budapest and Kenneth P. Mackie of the University of Washington revealed that the cannabinoid receptor occurred only on certain neurons and in very specific positions on those neurons. It was densely packed on neurons that released GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid), which is the brain’s main inhibitory neurotransmitter (it tells recipient neurons to stop firing). CB1 also sat near the synapse, the contact point between two neurons. This placement suggested that the cannabinoid receptor was somehow involved with signal transmission across GABA-using synapses. But why would the brain’s signaling system include a receptor for something produced by a plant?

 

 

The Lesson of Opium

The same question had arisen in the 1970s about morphine, a compound isolated from the poppy and found to bind to so-called opiate receptors in the brain. Scientists finally discovered that people make their own opioids–the enkephalins and endorphins. Morphine simply hijacks the receptors for the brain’s opioids.

It seemed likely that something similar was happening with THC and the cannabinoid receptor. In 1992, 28 years after he identified THC, Mechoulam discovered a small fatty acid produced in the brain that binds to CB1 and that mimics all the activities of marijuana. He named it anandamide, after the Sanskrit word ananda, “bliss.” Subsequently, Daniele Piomelli and Nephi Stella of the University of California at Irvine discovered that another lipid, 2-arachidonoyl glycerol (2-AG), is even more abundant in certain brain regions than anandamide is. Together the two compounds are considered the major endogenous cannabinoids, or endocannabinoids. (Recently investigators have identified what look like other endogenous cannabinoids, but their roles are uncertain.) The two cannabinoid receptors clearly evolved along with endocannabinoids as part of natural cellular communication systems. Marijuana happens to resemble the endocannabinoids enough to activate cannabinoid receptors.

Conventional neurotransmitters are water-soluble and are stored in high concentrations in little packets, or vesicles, as they wait to be released by a neuron. When a neuron fires, sending an electrical signal down its axon to its tips (presynaptic terminals), neurotransmitters released from vesicles cross a tiny intercellular space (the synaptic cleft) to receptors on the surface of a recipient, or postsynaptic, neuron. In contrast, endocannabinoids are fats and are not stored but rather are rapidly synthesized from components of the cell membrane. They are then released from places all over the cells when levels of calcium rise inside the neuron or when certain G-protein-coupled receptors are activated.

As unconventional neurotransmitters, canna-bin-oids presented a mystery, and for several years no one could figure out what role they played in the brain. Then, in the early 1990s, the answer emerged in a somewhat roundabout fashion. Scientists (including one of us, Alger, and his colleague at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, Thomas A. Pitler) found something unusual when studying pyramidal neurons, the principal cells of the hippocampus. After calcium concentrations inside the cells rose for a short time, incoming inhibitory signals in the form of GABA arriving from other neurons declined.

At the same time, Alain Marty, now at the Laboratory of Brain Physiology at the René Descartes University in Paris, and his colleagues saw the same action in nerve cells from the cerebellum. These were unexpected observations, because they suggested that receiving cells were somehow affecting transmitting cells and, as far as anyone knew, signals in mature brains flowed across synapses in one way only: from the presynaptic cell to the postsynaptic one.

 

 

A New Signaling System

It seemed possible that a new kind of neuronal communication had been discovered, and so researchers set out to understand this phenomenon. They dubbed the new activity DSI, for depolarization-induced suppression of inhibition. For DSI to have occurred, some unknown messenger must have traveled from the postsynaptic cell to the presynaptic GABA-releasing one and somehow shut off the neurotransmitter’s release.

Such backward, or “retrograde,” signaling was known to occur only during the development of the nervous system. If it were also involved in interactions among adult neurons, that would be an intriguing finding–a sign that perhaps other processes in the brain involved retrograde transmission as well. Retrograde signaling might facilitate types of neuronal information processing that were difficult or impossible to accomplish with conventional synaptic transmission. Therefore, it was important to learn the properties of the retrograde signal. Yet its identity remained elusive. Over the years, countless molecules were proposed. None of them worked as predicted.

Then, in 2001, one of us (Nicoll) and his colleague at the University of California at San Francisco, Rachel I. Wilson–and at the same time, but independently, a group led by Masanobu Kano of Kanazawa University in Japan–reported that an endocannabinoid, probably 2-AG, perfectly fit the criteria for the unknown messenger. Both groups found that a drug blocking cannabinoid receptors on presynaptic cells prevents DSI and, conversely, that drugs activating CB1 mimic DSI. They soon showed, as did others, that mice lacking cannabinoid receptors are incapable of generating DSI. The fact that the receptors are located on the presynaptic terminals of GABA neurons now made perfect sense. The receptors were poised to detect and respond to endocannabinoids released from the membranes of nearby postsynaptic cells.

Over time, DSI proved to be an important aspect of brain activity. Temporarily dampening inhibition enhances a form of learning called long-term potentiation–the process by which information is stored through the strengthening of synapses. Such storage and information transfer often involves small groups of neurons rather than large neuronal populations, and endocannabinoids are well suited to acting on these small assemblages. As fat-soluble molecules, they do not diffuse over great distances in the watery extracellular environment of the brain. Avid uptake and degradation mechanisms help to ensure that they act in a confined space for a limited period. Thus, DSI, which is a short-lived local effect, enables individual neurons to disconnect briefly from their neighbors and encode information.

A host of other findings filled in additional gaps in understanding about the cellular function of endocannabinoids. Researchers showed that when these neurotransmitters lock onto CB1 they can in some cases block presynaptic cells from releasing excitatory neurotransmitters. As Wade G. Regehr of Harvard University and Anatol C. Kreitzer, now at Stanford University, found in the cerebellum, endocannabinoids located on excitatory nerve terminals aid in the regulation of the massive numbers of synapses involved in coordinated motor control and sensory integration. This involvement explains, in part, the slight motor dysfunction and altered sensory perceptions often associated with smoking marijuana.

Recent discoveries have also begun to precisely link the neuronal effects of endocannabinoids to their behavioral and physiological effects. Scientists investigating the basis of anxiety commonly begin by training rodents to associate a particular signal with something that frightens them. They often administer a brief mild shock to the feet at the same time that they generate a sound. After a while the animal will freeze in anticipation of the shock if it hears the sound. If the sound is repeatedly played without the shock, however, the animal stops being afraid when it hears the sound–that is, it unlearns the fear conditioning, a process called extinction. In 2003 Giovanni Marsicano of the Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry in Munich and his co-workers showed that mice lacking normal CB1 readily learn to fear the shock-related sound, but in contrast to animals with intact CB1, they fail to lose their fear of the sound when it stops being coupled with the shock.

The results indicate that endocannabinoids are important in extinguishing the bad feelings and pain triggered by reminders of past experiences. The discoveries raise the possibility that abnormally low numbers of cannabinoid receptors or the faulty release of endogenous cannabinoids are involved in post-traumatic stress syndrome, phobias and certain forms of chronic pain. This suggestion fits with the fact that some people smoke marijuana to decrease their anxiety. It is also conceivable, though far from proved, that chemical mimics of these natural substances could allow us to put the past behind us when signals that we have learned to associate with certain dangers no longer have meaning in the real world.

 

 

Devising New Therapies

The repertoire of the brain’s own marijuana has not been fully revealed, but the insights about endocannabinoids have begun helping researchers design therapies to harness the medicinal properties of the plant. Several synthetic THC analogues are already commercially available, such as nabilone and dronabinol. They combat the nausea brought on by chemotherapy; dronabinol also stimulates appetite in AIDS patients. Other cannabinoids relieve pain in myriad illnesses and disorders. In addition, a CB1 antagonist–a compound that blocks the receptor and renders it impotent–has worked in some clinical trials to treat obesity. But though promising, these drugs all have multiple effects because they are not specific to the region that needs to be targeted. Instead they go everywhere, causing such adverse reactions as dizziness, sleepiness, problems of concentration and thinking abnormalities.

One way around these problems is to enhance the role of the body’s own endocannabinoids. If this strategy is successful, endocannabinoids could be called forth only under the circumstances and in the locations in which they are needed, thus avoiding the risks associated with widespread and indiscriminant activation of cannabinoid receptors. To do this, Piomelli and his colleagues are developing drugs that prevent the endocannabinoid anandamide from being degraded after it is released from cells. Because it is no longer broken down quickly, its anxiety-relieving effects last longer.

Anandamide seems to be the most abundant endocannabinoid in some brain regions, whereas 2-AG dominates in others. A better understanding of the chemical pathways that produce each endocannabinoid could lead to drugs that would affect only one or the other. In addition, we know that endocannabinoids are not produced when neurons fire just once but only when they fire five or even 10 times in a row. Drugs could be developed that would alter the firing rate and hence endocannabinoid release. A precedent for this idea is the class of anticonvulsant agents that suppress the neuronal hyperactivity underlying epileptic seizures but do not affect normal activity.

Finally, indirect approaches could target processes that themselves regulate endocannabinoids. Dopamine is well known as the neurotransmitter lost in Parkinson’s disease, but it is also a key player in the brain’s reward systems. Many pleasurable or addictive drugs, including nicotine and morphine, produce their effects in part by causing dopamine to be released in several brain centers. It turns out that dopamine can cause the release of endocannabinoids, and various research teams have found that two other neurotransmitters, glutamate and acetylcholine, also initiate endocannabinoid synthesis and release. Indeed, endocannabinoids may be a source of effects previously attributed solely to these neurotransmitters. Rather than targeting the endocannabinoid system directly, drugs could be designed to affect the conventional neurotransmitters. Regional differences in neurotransmitter systems could be exploited to ensure that endocannabinoids would be released only where they were needed and in appropriate amounts.

In a remarkable way, the effects of marijuana have led to the still unfolding story of the endocannabinoids. The receptor CB1 seems to be present in all vertebrate species, suggesting that systems employing the brain’s own marijuana have been in existence for about 500 million years. During that time, endocannabinoids have been adapted to serve numerous, often subtle, functions. We have learned that they do not affect the development of fear, but the forgetting of fear; they do not alter the ability to eat, but the desirability of the food, and so on. Their presence in parts of the brain associated with complex motor behavior, cognition, learning and memory implies that much remains to be discovered about the uses to which evolution has put these interesting messengers.

The many New and exciting advances that the Scientific Community and Medical Community are aware of as related to marijuana and the endocannabanoid system, are just scratching the surface, there is only more POSITIVE that will come from this wonderful oil producing plant. Thanks from Greg at Positive Vibrations.

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Cannabis helps with Arthritis

Cannabis helps with Arthritis

Treating Pain With Medical Marijuana

“Joints for Joints.” That was the title of a lighthearted yet science-based debate at the annual scientific meeting of the American College of Rheumatology/Association of Rheumatology Health Professionals in 2011. The topic: whether medical marijuana – that is, the medicinal use of the cannabis plant – was a safe and effective arthritis treatment.

Arthritis is caused by inflammation or swelling of one or more joints. It can be painful and most medications are not as effective as cannabis. There are online dispensaries you can buy from that sell great quality cannabis products. Though there are many ways to consume it, the most preferred method is to have edibles. Edibles are practical and long-lasting. You can develop your recipes or follow recipes online similar to Origins Cannabis (https://www.originscannabis.com/blog/how-to-make-high-quality-marijuana-edibles) to consume in a more fun way.

However, taking the “con” view, Stuart L. Silverman, MD, attending physician at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Beverly Hills, Calif., argued that although some cannabis research was compelling, inconsistent dosing and quality-control issues, as well as a lack of well-controlled research, meant marijuana was not “ready for prime time,” particularly where arthritis was concerned.

Taking the “pro” position, Arthur Kavanaugh, MD, a professor of medicine at the University of California, San Diego (who declined to be interviewed for this article), argued that the type of carefully controlled trials Dr. Silverman called for had not been conducted on aspirin, either, and that cannabis – used medicinally for nearly 5,000 years – had few side effects, eased pain from rheumatoid arthritis (RA), and might reduce inflammation as well.

Drs. Silverman and Kavanaugh didn’t reach any firm conclusions, but after multiple rheumatologists in the audience revealed that many of their patients were inquiring about or already using cannabis, one thing was clear: Medical marijuana had gone mainstream.

In fact, 18 states and Washington, D.C., have legalized limited use of medical marijuana for certain conditions. (Some, including California, permit it for arthritis; others, such as New Jersey, do not.) Two states, Washington and Colorado, have decriminalized even its recreational use. A 2011 Journal of Pain survey revealed that almost 10 percent of Americans with chronic pain use marijuana. Nowadays even doctors recommend patients suffering from joint pain or arthritis use cannabis-based products that can help them ease their pain. Some of these people often use CBD topicals like oils and creams to help with their condition. Others prefer to consume cannabis by smoking its flowers as it could be much easier to store and carry them in Edible Mylar Bags as compared to their liquid counterparts. That being said, it’s unclear how many of those have arthritis, large-scale surveys from the United Kingdom and Australia indicate that roughly one-third of people who use medical marijuana do so for arthritis – and most report considerable pain relief. Additionally, a Canadian study in Arthritis Care & Research found that among 457 patients with fibromyalgia, 13 percent used cannabis to manage their disease.

How It Works

Research shows that, among other things, cannabis eases chemotherapy-induced nausea and loss of appetite, and relieves spasms in individuals with multiple sclerosis. Even so, pain relief is perhaps the most well-recognized and studied effect.

Several decades ago, scientists discovered that mammals, including humans, have a pain-regulating system (the endocannabinoid system) with receptors in nervous system tissue, immune cells and bone and joint tissue. These receptors respond to cannabinoids, a set of compounds that include endocannabinoids, which the body creates on its own; and phyto-cannabinoids, plant-based compounds found in marijuana that are very similar to endocannabinoids.

The best known cannabinoids are THC (delta-8/9-tetrahydrocannabinol, the psychoactive compound in cannabis) and CBD (cannabidiol, a major constituent of the plant thought to act as a sedative and reduce inflammation, nausea, and convulsions). They have complex mechanisms, but in a nutshell, cannabinoids can reduce pain by acting on certain receptors.

The two main cannabis species are Sativa and Indica. Sativa contains higher THC and lower CBD levels and produces a more euphoric “high.” Indica has higher CBD and lower THC levels and is used to aid sleep and ease the pain. You can buy both CBD and THC products online or from a local dispensary. However, if you are unsure about such products being legal in your locality, say in New York, you can do your research on the internet (click here to read more) before purchasing.

Cannabinoids also seem to have a positive impact on some other pain medications. One study, in Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics in 2011, found that chronic pain patients using long-acting oxycodone or long-acting morphine who inhaled vaporized herbal cannabis experienced a significant decrease in pain – far more than with the opioids alone. Though the study was of just 21 patients, study author Donald I. Abrams, MD, professor of clinical medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, says it “suggests that cannabis has the potential to relieve pain and decrease use of opioids, which, unlike cannabis, are associated with major side effects.”

Evidence for Arthritis

Studies show it can be somewhat effective in treating pain from arthritis and related conditions. One meta-analysis of four randomized trials published as an abstract in the Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, found that oral cannabinoids (cannabis oil) offered minimal to moderate improvement compared with placebo in individuals with musculoskeletal pain, including RA, back pain and fibromyalgia. Study author Janet Pope, MD, professor of medicine at the University of Western Ontario in Canada, notes that the results are not generalizable to smoking marijuana, and says, “The benefit was modest, and this was only studied for short periods of time.”

A 2011 British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology review examined 18 studies of smoked, oral and/or synthetic cannabis and concluded cannabis was safe and modestly effective in neuropathic pain (chronic pain that results from damaged or dysfunctional nerve fibers), and also had the potential to help treat RA and fibromyalgia pain. As such, online stores like canadacannabisdispensary or even the nearby apothecary tend to be good options to source cannabis products to ease your pain. Additionally, cannabis has been shown to improve sleep – and a lack of sleep is known to exacerbate general pain and arthritis symptoms.

Cannabis holds promise for osteoarthritis (OA). “Joints have a complex endocannabinoid system and are able to produce their own endocannabinoids. But in disease states, such as with osteoarthritis, these endocannabinoids are broken down too quickly, so they can’t help with joint pain,” says Jason J. McDougall, PhD, associate professor in the departments of pharmacology and anesthesia at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. In ongoing animal research, McDougall and his colleagues have found that by blocking certain enzymes or injecting cannabinoids into the joint, sensitivity and pain are reduced, leading McDougall to speculate that both endocannabinoid-targeting and cannabis-based treatments may hold new hope for individuals with OA.

Cannabis also may ease inflammation and affect immunity. In-vitro and animal studies have shown that both herbal and synthetic cannabinoids have the ability to suppress inflammation. Most recently, a Biological & Pharmaceutical Bulletin study in 2011 revealed that six different cannabinoids inhibited the activity of COX-2 enzymes, which play a role in arthritis-related inflammation. Other preliminary studies suggest cannabinoids may have immunosuppressive properties – including the ability to inhibit pro-inflammatory molecules called cytokines.

Why Doctors Worry

Put simply, when you use herbal cannabis – that is, you inhale or ingest the marijuana plant in some form – you can’t be sure of what you’re getting. Cannabis contains hundreds of compounds, about 60 of them with cannabinoid properties. “But every plant contains different concentrations, so [using marijuana] is not the same as taking a carefully calibrated medication,” says Mary-Ann Fitzcharles, MD, associate professor of medicine in the department of rheumatology and pain management unit at McGill University in Montreal. She is considered one of the foremost experts on the use of cannabis in arthritis and fibromyalgia. In addition, she says, “There are no well-controlled studies on humans using herbal cannabis for arthritis. The few that exist are relatively small, and long-term effects are unknown.”

If you do obtain a prescription from a physician, you get your medication not at a pharmacy, but at a marijuana collective or dispensary – where the choices can be confusing at best, says Dr. Silverman. “You have a menu offering names like Blue Kush and Green Haze, which don’t necessarily tell you which kind of marijuana – indica, sativa or hybrid – it is. And not all list the potency – for example, 13 percent THC – or have been screened for fungus or pesticides. If you’re not familiar with marijuana, how do you know how much or which kind to use?”

Dr. Silverman says that most rheumatologists are not informed or prepared to give specific advice on how to use medical marijuana, “so you’re forced to rely on the advice of the person behind the dispensary counter,” he notes.

Dr. Abrams disagrees. “I’m a cancer doctor, not a rheumatologist, but most dispensaries in California, where I live, tell you whether you’re getting indica or sativa, as well as the percent of THC it contains,” he says. “And the bottom line is, marijuana is a very safe drug. When we give patients with chronic pain a prescription for gabapentin [a drug often used as a painkiller], we say, ‘Start with one; try two or three if that doesn’t work.’ It’s the same with medical marijuana: Start low and see how it goes.”

In addition, says Dr. Abrams, “As an oncologist, I see patients who have extreme pain, depression and nausea. I feel comfortable being able to recommend one ‘medication’ – a medication they can even grow themselves, which is very empowering – with few side effects, rather than multiple prescriptions for medications with severe side effects.”

In fact, Dr. Pope’s study found that the most common side effects of oral cannabinoids were drowsiness and confusion, and marijuana is not known to have negative interactions with medications used for RA, OA or most other musculoskeletal or rheumatic diseases. However, says Dr. Fitzcharles, “My research has shown that it is associated with anxiety in individuals with fibromyalgia. And because THC concentrations are so much higher than they used to be even 10 years ago, it is a known cause of acute psychotic episodes in Canadian emergency rooms.”

THC potency now can be greater than 20 percent – 10 times higher than in the 1960s and ’70s, Dr. Silverman adds.

Even so, many medical marijuana users with chronic pain say they don’t experience the “high” recreational users do – which some experts say may be due to complications in nerve signaling. Plus, medical marijuana users can choose specific strains with low concentrations of THC, adds Dr. Abrams.

Bottom Line

Every expert interviewed for this story expressed enthusiasm over research on cannabis and arthritis – and cautioned that the best options for most people are treatments with a proven track record.

“There’s no question that cannabinoids have the potential to have an impact on the disease,” says Dr. Fitzcharles. Even so, she adds, “I think to turn to something with very little evidence – and so much potential to have negative impact – is dangerous.”

Proven, effective treatments are already available for RA, OA and diseases like lupus, says Dr. Pope. But, she says, “We do need better treatments.”

Patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain have an unmet need for pain relief, given that existing medications, especially narcotics, have side effects that include addiction and impairment. Cannabis may come to fill the gap.

For now, however, “Medical marijuana is uncharted territory,” says Dr. Silverman. “So buyer beware.”

Camille Noe Pagán is a contributing editor to Arthritis Today.

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Chinese Tea for a Cold
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Chinese Cures for the Common Cold

“Chinese Common Cold Cures”

 

We wish you fabulous health on all of your China travels, but if you do happen to get the sniffles, these are some Chinese medicine-inspired home remedies that your new Chinese friends are likely to insist on.

 

Chinese Tea for a Cold
Ginger Honey Lemon Tea

Lemon Honey Ginger “Tea”

TChinese Medicine 1his is a go-to at the first sign of a sore throat or the sniffles. The lemon gives a boost of Vitamin-C, ginger brings a healthy kick that you’ll feel right away, and the honey sooths the throat. It’s a tasty, healthy drink that is catching on outside of China and is so easy to make. Slice up the ginger (no need to even peel the skin, just rinse it well), place it in cold water and bring to a boil for a few minutes. Pour the ginger water into a mug and then squeeze in some lemon and add a bit of honey to taste.

 

 

No Photo of the Pear Soup

Pear Soup

In Chinese medicine, if you’re coughing, it’s because your constitution has gotten too hot. And pears are a ‘cooling’ food. So a natural cure to a cough in China is pear soup. It’s a simple as could be, chop the pears up, put them in cold water and bring them to a boil.

 

 

 

 

Chinese Cold remedies
Rice Porridge Chinese Cold Remedy

Zhou (Rice Porridge or Congee)

With Chinese Medicine you can think of zhou as the Chinese version of chicken noodle soup. Zhou is Chinese comfort food enjoyed for breakfast on any given day, but it’s especially soothing if you’re sick. And since white rice is calming on the stomach, zhou is an ideal food to eat when your stomach is feeling upset. Zhou comes in dozens of flavors, both sweet and savory. We suggest you try every one of them!

 

 

 

Tomatoe Egg Soup
Tomatoe Egg Soup

Tomato Egg Soup

Healthy soups are a cure-all in China. And tomato-egg soup is probably the simplest soup you cChinese Medicine 3ould possibly make, and it’s tasty. Chop up some garlic and ginger and tomatoes in wedges. Place in cold water and bring to a boil. Add a bit of salt to taste. Beat eggs in a separate bowl. Once the tomatoes have boiled down and started falling apart, it’s time for the trickiest step: Place a big spoon in the pot and stir it quickly, to get the water going in a whirlpool fashion. Immediately turn off the fire and right away pour the egg in a thin stream into the soup. The heat will be enough to cook the egg thoroughly.

 

 

Hot water

You may have noticed a common theme at this point. The core of all of these Chinese home remedies is a pretty simple one: hot water. Complain about an ailment, and the response from your Chinese friend will most likely be – drink some hot water. (In fact, Chinese never drink cold water).

So if you want to keep it really simple, just drink some hot water!

Chinese Cures for the Common Cold, Oh ya, lets stay healthy.

Now this Information will keep you healthy and Happy, Thanks from Positive Vibrations for This wonderful article from WildChina archives.   😛
Marijuana Bud
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Testing Marijuana Potency

Potency testing is isolating cannabinoids and evaluating the strength. Potency testing assists patients and providers in determining the type of cannabinoids that will be best for the patients’ health needs. This testing allows patients to make informed choices regarding the medical cannabis they consume.

Research has shown that some of the active components in cannabis effect our bodies similarly to a class of molecules called endocannabinoids. These bind to the receptors in parts of a patient’s brain and body. This receptor binding influences a patient’s immune system, mood, memory, sleep, appetite, movement, and can protect nerve cells from premature death.
While there are hundreds of cannabinoids, there are only handfuls that have a significant rate of detection.

Our goal is to focus on the cannabinoids that are most commonly detected and most analytically accurate. There are a myriad of cannabinoids that can be tested, most cannabinoids will be detected at less than <0.01%. That can be misleading and confuse patients. Listing the most common and most detectable cannabinoids based on the processing method and end use of your medicine assures that you have accurate information.

 What Potency is right for me and my medical conditions ?

It is important to understand the strength of any medicine that you are planning on consuming. The potency of cannabis has increased exponentially over the years.

There is a vast amount of research that continues to be published regarding cannabinoids and their health effects. The following lists some of the researched health effects for specific cannabinoids.

  • Delta-9 Tetrahydrocannabinol (Δ9-THC): The most common form of THC found in cannabis and the most commonly researched. This is the compound that most people are familiar with. This cannabinoid is known as a pain inhibitor. It is utilized for its antioxidant qualities as well as its psychoactive qualities, which can create a feeling of euphoria.
  • Delta 9-Tetrahydrocannabinolic Acid (Δ9-THCA): The main constituent in raw cannabis. This cannabinoid is known for its anti-flammatory properties; can inhibit cell growth in certain cancer cells; and suppress some muscle spasms.
  • Delta-8 Tetrahydrocannabinol (Δ8-THC): Similar to Delta 9-THC, is also known for its euphoric effect and analgesic properties. Some think it has a lessor effect since it is found in smaller quantities than Delta 9 THC.
  • CBC- Cannabichromene: A non-psychoactive cannabinoid is usually found in smaller levels if it is found to be present at all. It is known to have analgesic, antifungal, anti-inflammatory, and antibiotic qualities.
  • CBCA- Cannabichromenic Acid: The acid form of CBC is known for its antifungal, anti- inflammatory, and antibiotic qualities.
  • CBD – Cannabidiol: Is primarily a non-psychoactive compound. It is known for its antioxidant, antispasmodic, analgesic, antipsychotic, and anti-inflammatory properties. Research has shown that it may inhibit the expansion of some cancer cells.
  • CBDA – Cannabidiolic Acid: The acid form of CBD is known as a pain inhibitor.
  • CBG – Cannabigerol: A non-psychoactive cannabinoid and thought to be the “stem cell”. Enzymes in cannabis convert CBG to other cannabinoids. It is known for is antibiotic, analgesic, antifungal, and anti-inflammatory effects.
  • CBGA- Cannabigerolic Acid: The acid form of CBG is known for its antibiotic properties.
  • CBN – Cannabinol: Is the product of THC oxidation and occurs when the cannabis flower is exposed to oxygen. It can interact synergistically with THC and can accentuate the “couch lock” feeling. It is known for its sedative, antibiotic, anti-inflammatory, and anticonvulsant properties.
  • CBNA – Cannabinolic Acid: The acid form of CBN is known for sedative effects. It may even help stimulate bone growth.

 

What Is The Law in Oregon for testing Medical Marijuana. 

Green Leaf Lab has created and follows procedures that ensure that the proper random samples are taken for the applicable testing procedure to ensure a proper representation of the larger batch.

We have created a process in which batches of medical cannabis can remain in the possession of the customer during the testing process.

Our batch testing procedure and reporting processes create multiple safety checks to ensure that the results have not been tampered with and can be verifiable.

Immature Plants may be tested for pesticides, molds, or mildew by conducting a macroscopic or microscopic screening, to determine if the plant has a visible pesticide residue, molds, or mildew.

Green Leaf Lab has qualified personnel who can inspect your immature plants for pesticides, molds, or mildew, and also certify that they have passed the inspection procedure.

House Bill 3460 requires that all flower and processed products, such as edibles and concentrates, are tested for THC and CBD content.

 

We believe that everyone should have access to more information regarding cannabinoids. Green Leaf Lab also offers potency testing that reports 6 cannabinoids. These cannabinoids are: Delta 8 THC, Delta 9 THC, CBD, CBN, CBG and CBC.

Oregon State Dispensary Law requires that useable flower be tested for pesticides. If a concentrate or edible is made from a flower that has already been tested for pesticides a second pesticide screen is not required.

Our pesticide screen complies with the new requirements and detects the presence of the following compounds at a detection rate of 0.1 parts per million:

  • Chlorinated Hydrocarbons
  • Organophosphates
  • Carbamates
  • Pyrethroids

Oregon Law and OAR 333-008-1190 allow for a mold and mildew limit of 10,000 CFU/g.

We at Green Leaf Lab believe this limit is too high, as there is not enough peer-reviewed scientific research that shows this limit is safe for medicinal patients.

Oregon State Dispensary Law requires that a dispensary follow proper labeling guidelines before medical cannabis is transferred to a patient.

The label must include at a minimum:

  • The amount of THC and CBD in the useable marijuana.
  • If the product is pre-packaged, the weight or volume in metric units, such as grams.
  • The amount of useable marijuana in a finished product, in metric units, such as milliliters, milligrams or grams.
  • Who performed the testing.
  • If the product is a medicated edible, it must have a warning label on the outside of the package that states “WARNING: MEDICINAL PRODUCT- KEEP OUT OF REACH OF CHILDREN”. This must be in bold capital letters, in a font size that is larger than the type size of the other printing and on the label prominently displayed on the product and easy to read.
Thanks from Positive Vibrations Medical Marijuana Dispensary for reading this information, and thanks to Green Leaf Lab for their Information on how they comply with the testing requirement thru them for Medical Marijuana in Oregon.