Larrytreez
Well-Known Member
I just saw this the other day, thanks for posting.
a tolerance to just one type of cannabis develops over time, hence multiple varietals, multiple effects. hence legalization, hence people Are Hell!https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/11/191125100353.htm
Summary:
Inhaled cannabis reduces self-reported headache severity by 47.3% and migraine severity by 49.6%, according to a recent study. The study also found no evidence that cannabis caused 'overuse headache,' a pitfall of more conventional treatments. The researchers did see patients using larger doses of cannabis over time, indicating they may be developing tolerance to the drug.
I'm so pleased your wife is getting migraine treatment that is helping her. You both have my deepest sympathies for the suffering you have been through, and my best wishes for a pain free future.I've posted this earlier but .... We tried it all and cannabis and Botox were very helpful. Botox worked great for about 9 months until the body figured out how to fight off the Botox. All we were left with was cannabis which was a huge help but it didn't eliminate the pain.
When the Botox stopped working the neurologist said he had one more thing we could try. Occipital surgery for migraine. The problem is that none of the health insurance companies cover it so it's thousands of dollars out of pocket. Without going into great detail....The premise is that the occipital nerves are being "stressed" and need to be "released". They do numbing agent tests of the front and back of the head where the occipital nerves can cause migraines. The numbing agent doesn't last long. Just long enough to see if the patient will benefit from the surgery. Our surgeon applied the minimal cost of the test to the overall surgery cost.
To us it was worth a try....the numbing tests worked and when the surgery was over the surgeon said "He was able to free up the nerves and that they were being "impacted" by a abnormality pressing on the nerves. Takes awhile for the pain from the surgery to subside so you can tell how well the surgery went but when the smoke cleared.....no more 24/7 migraines! My wife now gets migraines like a normal person (One or two a month and sometimes less).
The irony of all this is that the migraine doctors recommend occipital surgery as a last resort when everything else has been tried and failed. Our surgeon mentioned that it's been around for awhile now and one of the CFOs of a well known health insurance company had his daughter get the surgery and it worked beautifully. Go figure.....
My understanding is that sublingual is the fit between eating and smoking/vaping and is actually absorbed via the lining under the tongue directly into the bloodstream. I'm not a doctor though....I just play one on FC
Definitely agree that vaping is the fastest method though.....