Medical Marijuana Historical Record
Introduction from Marijuana: Medical Papers
by Todd Mikuriya, M.D. (Medi-Comp Press, 1973,
pp. xiii-xxvii)
Medicine in the Western World has forgotten
almost all it once knew about therapeutic properties of marijuana,
or cannabis.
Analgesia, anticonvulsant action, appetite stimulation,
ataraxia, antibiotic properties and low toxicity were described
throughout medical literature, beginning in 1839, when
O'Shaughnessy introduced cannabis into the Western
pharmacopoeia.
As these findings were reported throughout Western medicine,
cannabis attained wide use. Cannabis therapy was described in most
pharmacopoeial texts as a treatment for a variety of disease
conditions.
During the second half of the 1800s and in the present century,
medical researchers in some measure corroborated the early reports
of the therapeutic potential of cannabis. In addition, much
laboratory research has been concerned with bioassay, determination
of the mode of action, and attempts to solve the problems of
insolubility in water and variability of strength among different
cannabis specimens.
"Recreational" smoking of cannabis in the twentieth century and
the resultant restrictive federal legislation have functionally
ended all medical uses of marijuana.
In light of such assets as minimal toxicity, no buildup of
tolerance, no physical dependence, and minimal autonomic
disturbance, immediate major clinical reinvestigation of cannabis
preparations is indicated in the management of pain, chronic
neurologic diseases, convulsive disorders, migraine headache,
anorexia, mental illness, and bacterial infections.
Recently declassified secret U.S. Defense Department studies
reconfirm marijuana's congeners to have therapeutic utility.
Cannabis indica, Cannabis sativa, Cannabis americana, Indian
hemp and marijuana (or marihuana) all refer to the same plant.
Cannabis is used throughout the world for diverse purposes and has
a long history characterized by usefulness, euphoria or
evil--depending on one's point of view. To the agriculturist
cannabis is a fiber crop; to the physician of a century ago it was
a valuable medicine; to the physician of today it is an enigma; to
the user, a euphoriant; to the police, a menace; to the
traffickers, a source of profitable danger; to the convict or
parolee and his family, a source of sorrow.
This book is concerned primarily with the medicinal aspects of
cannabis.
The Chinese emperor Shen-nung is reported to have taught his
people to grow hemp for fiber in the twenty-eighth century B.C. A
text from the period 1500-1200 B.C. documents a knowledge of the
plant in China- -but not for use as fiber. In 200 A.D., the use of
cannabis as an analgesic was described by the physician
Hoa-tho.[44]
The Chinese emperor Shen-nung is reported to have taught his
people to grow hemp for fiber in the twenty-eighth century B.C. A
text from the period 1500-1200 B.C. documents a knowledge of the
plant in China- -but not for use as fiber. In 200 A.D., the use of
cannabis as an analgesic was described by the physician
Hoa-tho.[44]
In India the use of hemp preparations as a remedy was described
before 1000 B.C. In Persia, cannabis was known several centuries
before Christ. In Assyria, about 650 B.C., its intoxicating
properties were noted.[44]
Except for Herodotus' report that the Scythians used the smoke
from burning hemp seeds for intoxication, the ancient Greeks seemed
to be unaware of the psychoactive properties of cannabis.
Dioscorides in the first century A.D. rendered an accurate
morphologic description of the plant, but made no note of
intoxicating properties.[10]
In the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, Arabic writers
described the social use of cannabis and resultant cruel but
unsuccessful attempts to suppress its non-medical use.[44]
Although Galen described the use of the seeds for creating
warmth, he did not describe the intoxicating qualities of hemp. Of
interest is the paucity of references to hemp's intoxicating
properties in the lay and medical literature of Europe before the
1800s.[44]
The therapeutic use of cannabis was introduced into Western
medicine in 1839, in a forty-page article by W. B. O'Shaughnessy, a
thirty- year-old physician serving with the British in India.[27]
His discussion of the history of the use of cannabis products in
the East reveals an awareness that these drugs had not only been
used in medicine for therapeutic purposes, but had also been used
for recreational and religious purposes.
O'Shaughnessy is not primarily known for his discovery of hemp
drugs, but rather for his basic studies on intravenous electrolyte
therapy in 1831, and his introduction of the telegraph into India
in the 1850s.[26]
After studying the literature on cannabis and conferring with
contemporary Hindu and Mohammedan scholars O'Shaughnessy tested the
effects of various hemp preparations on animals, before attempting
to use them to treat humans. Satisfied that the drug was reasonably
safe, he administered preparations of cannabis extract to patients,
and discovered that it had analgesic and sedative properties.
O'Shaughnessy successfully relieved the pain of rheumatism and
stilled the convulsions of an infant with this strange new drug.
His most spectacular success came, however, when he quelled the
wrenching muscle spasms of tetanus and rabies with the fragrant
resin. Psychic effects resembling a curious delirium, when an
overdose was given, were treated with strong purgatives, emetics
with a blister to the nape of the neck, and leeches on the
temples.[27]
The use of cannabis derivatives for medicinal purposes spread
rapidly throughout Western medicine, as is evidenced in the report
of the Committee on Cannabis Indica of the Ohio State Medical
Society, published in 1860. In that report physicians told of
success in treating stomach pain, childbirth psychosis, chronic
cough, and gonorrhea with hemp products.[25] A Dr. Fronmueller, of
Fuerth, Ohio, summarized his experiences with the drug as
follows:
I have used hemp many hundred times to relieve local pains of an
inflammatory as well as neuralgic nature, and judging from these
experiments, I have to assign to the Indian hemp a place among the
so-called hypnotic medicines next to opium; its effects are less
intense, and the secretions are not so much suppressed by it.
Digestion is not disturbed; the appetite rather increased; sickness
of the stomach seldom induced; congestion never. Hemp may
consequently be employed in inflammatory conditions. It disturbs
the expectoration far less than opium; the nervous system is also
not so much affected. The whole effect of hemp being less violent,
and producing a more natural sleep, without interfering with the
actions of the internal organs, it is certainly often preferable to
opium, although it is not equal to that drug in strength and
reliability. An alternating course of opium and Indian hemp seems
particularly adapted to those cases where opium alone fails in
producing the desired effect.[25]
Because cannabis did not lead to physical dependence, it was
found to be superior to the opiates for a number of therapeutic
purposes. Birch, in 1889, reported success in treating opiate and
chloral addiction with cannabis,[5] and Mattison in 1891
recommended its use to the young physician, comparing it favorably
with the opiates. He quoted his colleague Suckling:
With a wish for speedy effect, it is so easy to use that modern
mischief-maker, hypodermic morphia, that they [young physicians]
are prone to forget remote results of incautious opiate giving.
Would that the wisdom which has come to their professional
fathers through, it may be, a hapless experience, might serve them
to steer clear of narcotic shoals on which many a patient has gone
awreck.
Indian hemp is not here lauded as a specific. It will, at times,
fail. So do other drugs. But the many cases in which it acts well,
entitle it to a large and lasting confidence.
My experience warrants this statement: cannabis indica is,
often, a safe and successful anodyne and hypnotic.[23]
In their study of the medical applications of cannabis,
physicians of the nineteenth century repeatedly encountered a
number of difficulties. Recognizing the therapeutic potential of
the drug, many experimenters sought ways of overcoming these
drawbacks to its use in medicine, in particular the following:
Cannabis products are insoluble in water.
The onset of the effects of medicinal preparations of cannabis
takes an hour or so; its action is therefore slower than that of
many other drugs.
Different batches of cannabis derivatives vary greatly in
strength; moreover, the common procedure for standardization of
cannabis samples, by administration to test animals, is subject to
error owing to variability of reactions among the animals.
There is wide variation among humans in their individual
responses to cannabis.
Despite these problems regarding the uncertainty of potency and
dosage and the difficulties in mode of administration, cannabis has
several important advantages over other substances used as
analgesics, sedatives, and hypnotics:
The prolonged use of cannabis does not lead to the development
of physical dependence. [11, 13, 14, 24, 39, 44]
There is minimal development of tolerance to cannabis products.
(Loewe notes a slight "beginner's habituation" in dogs, during the
first few trials with the drug, as the only noticeable tolerance
effect.[20]) [11, 13, 14, 24, 44]
Cannabis products have exceedingly low toxicity.[9, 21, 22, 24]
(The oral dose required to kill a mouse has been found to be about
40,000 times the dose required to produce typical symptoms of
intoxication in man.)[21]
Cannabis produces no disturbance of vegetative functioning,
whereas the opiates inhibit the gastrointestinal tract, the flow of
bile and the cough reflex.[1, 2, 24, 44, 46]
Besides investigating the physical effects of medicinal
preparations of cannabis, nineteenth-century physicians observed
the psychic effects of the drug in its therapeutic applications.[4,
27, 33] They found that cannabis first mildly stimulates, and then
sedates the higher centers of the brain. Hare suggested in 1887 a
possible mechanism of cannabis' analgesic properties:
During the time that this remarkable drug is relieving pain a
very curious psychical condition manifests itself; namely, that the
diminution of the pain seems to be due to its fading away in the
distance, so that the pain becomes less and less, just as the pain
in a delicate ear would grow less and less as a beaten drum was
carried farther and farther out of the range of hearing.
This condition is probably associated with the other well- known
symptom produced by the drug; namely, the prolongation of
time.[16]
Reynolds, in 1890,[33] summed up thirty years of his clinical
experience using cannabis, finding it useful as a nocturnal
sedative in senile insomnia, and valuable in treating dysmenorrhea,
neuralgias including tic douloureux and tabetic symptoms, migraine
headache and certain epileptoid or choreoid muscle spasms. He felt
it to be of uncertain benefit in asthma, alcoholic delirium and
depressions. Reynolds thought cannabis to be of no value in joint
pains that were aggravated by motion and in cases of true chronic
epilepsy.
Reynolds stressed the necessity of titrating the dose of each
patient, increasing gradually every third or fourth day, to avoid
"toxic" effects:
The dose should be given in minimum quantity, repeated in not
less than four or six hours, and gradually increased by one drop
every third or fourth day, until either relief is obtained, or the
drug is proved, in such case, to be useless. With these precautions
I have never met with any toxic effects, and have rarely failed to
find, after a comparatively short time, either the value or the
uselessness of the drug.[33]
Concerning migraine headache, Osler stated in his text: Cannabis
indica is probably the most satisfactory remedy.[11, 28]
In his definitive survey of the literature and report of his own
studies, deceptively titled "Marihuana, America's New Drug
Problem," Walton notes that cannabis was widely used during the
latter half of the nineteenth century, and particularly before new
drugs were developed:
This popularity of the hemp drugs can be attributed partly to
the fact that they were introduced before the synthetic hypnotics
and analgesics. Chloral hydrate was not introduced until 1869 and
was followed in the next thirty years by paraldehyde, sulfonal and
the barbitals. Antipyrine and acetanilide, the first of their
particular group of analgesics, were introduced about 1884. For
general sedative and analgesic purposes, the only drugs commonly
used at this time were the morphine derivatives and their
disadvantages were very well known. In fact, the most attractive
feature of the hemp narcotics was probably the fact that they did
not exhibit certain of the notorious disadvantages of the opiates.
The hemp narcotics do not constipate at all, they more often
increase than decrease appetite, they do not particularly depress
the respiratory center even in large doses, they rarely or never
cause pruritis or cutaneous eruptions and, most important, the
liability of developing addiction is very much less than with
opiates.[44]
The use of cannabis in American medicine was seriously affected
by the increased use of opiates in the latter half of the
nineteenth century. With the introduction of the hypodermic syringe
into American medicine from England in 1856 by Barker and Ruppaner,
the use of the faster acting, water-soluble opiate drugs rapidly
increased. The Civil War helped to spread the use of opiates in
this country; the injected drugs were administered widely--and
often indiscriminately--to relieve the pain of maimed soldiers
returning from combat. (Opiate addiction was once called the "army
disease."[41]) As the use of injected opiates increased, cannabis
declined in popularity.
Cannabis preparations were still widely available in legend and
over-the-counter forms in the 1930s. Crump (Chairman, Investigating
Committee, American Medical Association) in 1931 mentioned the
proprietaries "Piso's Cure," "One Day Cough Cure" and "Neurosine"
as containing cannabis.[44] In 1937 Sasman listed twenty-eight
pharmaceuticals containing cannabis.[36] Cannabis was still
recognized as a medicinal agent in that year, when the committee on
legislative activities of the American Medical Association
concluded as follows:
. . . there is positively no evidence to indicate the abuse of
cannabis as a medicinal agent or to show that its medicinal use is
leading to the development of cannabis addiction. Cannabis at the
present time is slightly used for medicinal purposes, but it would
seem worthwhile to maintain its status as a medicinal agent for
such purposes as it now has. There is a possibility that a re-study
of the drug by modern means may show other advantages to be derived
from its medicinal use.[32]
Meanwhile, in Mexico, the poor were smoking marijuana to relax
and to endure heat and fatigue. (Originally marijuana was the
Mexican slang word for the smoking preparation of dried leaves and
flowering tops of the Cannabis sativa plant--the indigenous variety
of the hemp plant.)
The recreational smoking of marijuana may have started in this
country in New Orleans in about 1910, and continued on a small
scale there until 1926, when a newspaper ran a six-part series on
the use of the drug.[44] The fad subsequently spread up the
Mississippi and throughout the United States, faster than local and
state laws could be passed to discourage it. The use of "tea" or
"muggles" blossomed into a minor "psychedelic revolution" of the
1920s. Narcotics officers encouraged the enactment of local
prohibitory laws and eventually succeeded in bringing about
restrictive Federal legislation. In 1937 Congress passed the
Marihuana Tax Act, the finale to a series of prohibitory acts in
the individual states. Under the new laws, the already dwindling
use of cannabis as a therapeutic substance in medicine was brought
to a virtual halt. In 1941, cannabis was dropped from the "National
Formulary and Pharmacopoeia."
Around the time of the passage of the Marihuana Tax Act, Walton
postulated sites of action for cannabis drugs. Cortical areas, he
found, are affected at low dosage, while at high dosage there seems
to be a depressant effect on the thalamo-cortical pathways.
Hyperemia of the brain appears to be a local phenomenon, unless
centers controlling vasodilation might be located in the
thalamo-cortical region. Similar possible mechanisms are suggested
for the phenomenon of mild hypoglycemia, usual hunger and thirst
and occasional lacrimation and nausea.[44]
Despite restrictive legislation, a few medical researchers have
had the opportunity to continue the investigation of the
therapeutic applications of cannabis in recent years. In his study
of the medical applications of cannabis for Mayor La Guardia's
committee, Dr. Samuel Allentuck reported, among other findings,
favorable results in treating withdrawal of opiate addicts with
tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), a powerful purified product of the hemp
plant.[1, 24]
An article in 1949, buried in a journal of chemical abstracts,
reported that a substance related to THC controlled epileptic
seizures in a group of children more effectively than
diphenylhydantoin (Dilantin(R)), a most commonly prescribed
anticonvulsant.[9]
A number of experimenters, believing that cannabis products
might be of value in psychiatry, have investigated the applications
of various forms of them in the treatment of mental disorders.
Cannabis had been used in the nineteenth century to treat mental
illness.[19, 25, 45, 46] However, aside from some rather equivocal
clinical studies, primarily in the treatment of depression,[29, 30,
35, 39] and another report of success in treating withdrawal from
alcohol and opiate addiction,[42] no significant contemporary
psychiatric studies involving cannabis therapy have been reported
to date.
Many current "authoritative" publications unequivocally state
that there is no legitimate medical use for marijuana. As compared
with the 1800s, this century has seen very little medical research
on the array of some twenty chemicals that are found in the hemp
plant.[37]
Today's readers may tend to be skeptical about a report of a
cure for gonorrhea published over a century ago.[19, 25] Such
findings may bear reinvestigation, however, in the light of a
report from Czechoslovakia in 1960 that cannabidiolic acid, a
product of the unripe hemp plant, has bacteriocidal properties.[7]
Some of the therapeutic applications reported in the early medical
papers have been corroborated by later investigators, but for the
most part the therapeutic aspects of cannabis remain to be
re-explored under modern clinical conditions.
In the past twenty years, clinical and basic research on
cannabis have dwindled to practically nothing. The record of tax
stamps issued by the Federal Bureau of Narcotics for cannabis
research, as compared with those for research on narcotic drugs,
tells the story of the twenty-year "drought" in the investigation
of cannabis products:[43]
Users for Purposes of Research, Instruction, or Analysis Year Narcotic Drugs Marijuana 1938 . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 5 1941 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94 .. 1943 . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 43 1946 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 323 .. 1948 . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 87 1951 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1078 .. 1953 . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 18 1956 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 284 .. 1958 . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 6 1961 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 344 .. 1965 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 431 16
The rising non-medical use of marijuana both floated and was
buoyed by the "psychedelic revolution" of the mid 1960s. The
panicked reaction included a renewed scientific interest in the
drug.
Eleven studies funded by the National Institute of Mental Health
1967 concerning cannabis were either specialized animal
experiments, part of an observational sociologic study of a number
of drugs, or explorations of chemical detection methods. No human
studies were included.
Of the fifty-six projects funded during the next fiscal years
1968-69 only two used humans.[52] The next year was somewhat less
cautious with eight out of thirty-five projects devoted to clinical
studies.[53]
Some of the preliminary results are in from these studies. Much
is still unpublished.
According to Harris, the toxicity factor of marijuana
derivatives is over two hundred and that chronic smoking of
marijuana is less harmful to the lungs than tobacco
cigarettes.[49]
Domino described the cross tolerance of THC and alcohol in
pigeons[47] corroborating Jones' clinical observations.[50, 51]
These rediscoveries demand therapeutic trial.
In August 1971 certain secret Defense Department documents were
declassified. While at NIMH as a consulting research psychiatrist
in 1967 I had become aware of the existence of clandestine research
at Edgewood Arsenal in Maryland.
From 1954-59 Dr. Van M. Sim was in charge of the project. He
reported to "Medical World News:" "Marijuana . . . is probably the
most potent anti-epileptic known to medicine today."[49]
Dr. Harold F. Hardman, then with the Defense contracting group
at the University of Michigan's Department of Pharmacology reported
effects of profound hypothermia and felt marijuana derivatives to
be potentially quite useful in brain and traumatic surgery.[48]
The principal focus was, however, on the possible use of THC
homologs as incapacitating agents. Besides the aforementioned
government agency and university, the private sector was
represented by the Arthur D. Little Company of Cambridge,
Massachusetts.[55]
Recently in the course of a study of effects on driving, it was
incidentally discovered that cannabis lowers intraocular pressure,
thus being possibly useful in the treatment of glaucoma.[56]
Thus, a helix is made. Modern technologic methods confirm
O'Shaughnessy's observations 130 years ago. After swinging away
from the knowledge of marijuana's properties through the worship of
new synthetics, an unrelated rise of marijuana use socially,
illegalization and removal from availability for clinical use,
medicine rediscovers marijuana.
The flame of knowledge is at a low ebb, kept alive by isolated
scientists and clinicians; it is now being rekindled by these
recent circumscribed revelations.
Unless existing restrictive state and federal laws governing
marijuana are changed, there will be no future for either modern
scientific investigation or controlled clinical trial by
present-day methods.
The tide is turning. The Federal Bureau of Narcotic and
Dangerous Drugs, National Institute of Mental Health and The Food
and Drug Administration Joint Committee recently authorized human
therapeutic trial of cannabis products. We may now look forward to
reinvestigation of the numerous possible medical uses of
marijuana.[54]
A concerted effort is indicated for full-scale investigations
where knowledge is lacking. Acute and chronic effects of cannabis
should be restudied by modern methods. Metabolic pathways of action
and detoxification need exploration by the pharmaceutical means of
today. Chronic toxicity studies must be undertaken to examine
possible long- term effects of cannabis use. (Cunningham in 1893
found no gross central nervous system changes with chronic
administration of hemp drugs to primates over several
months.[8])
Medical science must again confront the problems of cannabis'
insolubility in water and its variable strength. Since human and
animal responses vary a great deal, individual doses must be
titrated. The popular "double blind" type of study methods will
require revision. The reporting of personal drug experience was
once acceptable to the scientific community.[15, 22, 25, 29, 34,
39, 44] Humans who are drug "sophisticates" will again become
indispensable to psychoactive drug research, as wine tasters are to
the wine industry, for only humans can verbally report the subtle
and complex effects of these substances.
Government agencies having stimulated little significant
clinical research in this field, the pharmaceutical industry should
take the initiative in starting basic research and clinical studies
into the purified congeners of cannabis for their chemical
properties, pharmacologic qualities and therapeutic
applications.
"Possible Therapeutic Applications of Tetrahydrocannabinols and
Like Products"
Analgesic-hypnotic [16, 18, 19, 23, 25, 27,33, 45]
Appetite stimulant [18, 25, 27]
Antiepileptic-antispasmodic [9, 18, 27, 33, 40, 45, 49]
Prophylactic and treatment of the neuralgias, including migraine and tic douloureux [3, 16, 17, 18, 19, 23, 25, 28, 31, 33, 38, 40, 45]
Antidepressant-tranquilizer [6, 16, 18, 19, 23, 25, 31, 33, 40, 45]
Antiasthmatic [18, 25, 45]
Oxytocic [25, 45]
Antitussive [3, 16, 25, 38, 45]
Topical anesthetic [8]
Withdrawal agent for opiate and alcohol addiction [5, 23, 24, 38, 42, 45, 47, 50, 51]
Childbirth analgesic [12]
Antibiotic [7]
Intraocular hypotensive [56]
Hypothermogenic [48]
Appetite stimulant [18, 25, 27]
Antiepileptic-antispasmodic [9, 18, 27, 33, 40, 45, 49]
Prophylactic and treatment of the neuralgias, including migraine and tic douloureux [3, 16, 17, 18, 19, 23, 25, 28, 31, 33, 38, 40, 45]
Antidepressant-tranquilizer [6, 16, 18, 19, 23, 25, 31, 33, 40, 45]
Antiasthmatic [18, 25, 45]
Oxytocic [25, 45]
Antitussive [3, 16, 25, 38, 45]
Topical anesthetic [8]
Withdrawal agent for opiate and alcohol addiction [5, 23, 24, 38, 42, 45, 47, 50, 51]
Childbirth analgesic [12]
Antibiotic [7]
Intraocular hypotensive [56]
Hypothermogenic [48]
Medicine, being an empiric art, has not hesitated in the past to
utilize a substance first used for recreational purposes, (Morton
"discovered" ether for anesthetic purposes after observing medical
students at "ether frolics" in 1846. [Howard W. Haggard: "Devils,
Drugs and Doctors," Harper and Row, New York, 1929, p. 99.]) in the
pursuit of the more noble purposes of healing, relieving pain and
teaching us more of the workings of the human mind and body. The
active constituents of cannabis appear to have remarkably low acute
and chronic toxicity factors and might be quite useful in the
management of many chronic disease conditions. More reasonable laws
and regulations controlling psychoactive drug research are required
to permit significant medical inquiry to begin so that we can fill
the large gaps in our knowledge of cannabis.
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