Hah, funny you should ask this, I'd been wondering the same as I've had Aussie flu for the past 3 weeks.wasn't sure how to search for such a question though obviously it's been asked.
i wonder whether having these minor cold viruses and vaping while recovering have any
negative effect on recovery?
tnx.
Hah, funny you should ask this, I'd been wondering the same as I've had Aussie flu for the past 3 weeks.
I, personally, have found that vaping made my chest much worse. In fact it felt as though I'd get a chest infection or bronchitis if I continued. It felt like I'd been punched in the lungs with each (light) draw and the body aches got worse too, really unpleasant.
I vaped in the early stages because it eased the body aches and boredom, but once it hit my chest I had to take a forced T-break.
I'm sure some people can probably get away with vaping right the way through, lucky them!
In terms of speeding up recovery, hard to say because you can't really A/B test it. I mean, if you vape and it clears up quickly, how do you know it wouldn't have done anyway even if you weren't vaping.
Craving my Omnivap and Milaana so much man!
Hope you are well past it soon man, you haven't let anything on anyway in your posts- no grumpy manflu syndrome haha!Hah, funny you should ask this, I'd been wondering the same as I've had Aussie flu for the past 3 weeks.
I, personally, have found that vaping made my chest much worse. In fact it felt as though I'd get a chest infection or bronchitis if I continued. It felt like I'd been punched in the lungs with each (light) draw and the body aches got worse too, really unpleasant.
I vaped in the early stages because it eased the body aches and boredom, but once it hit my chest I had to take a forced T-break.
I'm sure some people can probably get away with vaping right the way through, lucky them!
In terms of speeding up recovery, hard to say because you can't really A/B test it. What I mean is, if you vape and it clears up quickly, how do you know it wouldn't have done anyway even if you weren't vaping.
Craving my Omnivap and Milaana so much man!
All kinds of studies out there suggest immunosuppressant effects of THC and CBD.wasn't sure how to search for such a question though obviously it's been asked.
i wonder whether having these minor cold viruses and vaping while recovering have any
negative effect on recovery?
tnx.
I've always vaped during colds. Never seemed to slow down recovery, though it also didn't speed it up. It just made most symptoms a lot more bearable, and made me sleep much easier.
As for the flu, I finally caught it last winter, after almost a decade of having avoided it. I vaped through most of it, even the first 2 days when I could not really get out of bed because I was so weak. It eased some pain and just made me sleep easier.
All kinds of studies out there suggest immunosuppressant effects of THC and CBD.
I always quit vaping when I have a cold. I find that if I keep vaping it just makes the situation a lot worse. Sometimes it leads to sinus infections or Bronchitis. Now when I have an allergy attack in spring or fall, I usually do not quit. If I let my allergies stop me from vaping I would never vape. Once again though if it turns into a sinus infection then I will quit.
I've found if I can vape slowly and at lowest possible heat, I can vape thru most colds/flus. When I get sick, I go back to my trusty old Vapir NO2, drop temps to around 375, and stretch the session out to about 5+ mins. For me the key is to vape w/out further irritating my throat/lungs. When I get a cold, I find cannabis works great at reducing aches and pains.
There actually haven't been any definitive studies that show cannabis reduces immune response to something like a cold or flu. Here is a recent (1/2017) NCBI assessment:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK425755/
Lot of medical tech stuff, but if you go to the conclusions, you get the idea. When we say "immune system" it's not just one thing - it's many mechanisms - some work together, some independently. For example, you can take a drug that reduces an inflammatory immune response (there's actually evidence cannabis does this), while having no effect on a disease fighting immune response.
Cannabis can apparently regulate parts of the human immune response system - suppressing an over-active system (like Crohn's or Arthritis) or aiding a lacking system (as w/ HIV) .