Patterns of medicinal cannabis use, strain analysis, and substitution effect among patients with migraine, headache, arthritis, and chronic pain in a medicinal cannabis cohort
Background Medicinal cannabis registries typically report pain as the most common reason for use. It would be clinically useful to identify patterns of cannabis treatment in migraine and headache, as compared to arthritis and chronic pain, and to analyze preferred cannabis strains, biochemical profi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of headache and pain 2018-05, Vol.19 (1), p.37-28, Article 37 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background
Medicinal cannabis registries typically report pain as the most common reason for use. It would be clinically useful to identify patterns of cannabis treatment in migraine and headache, as compared to arthritis and chronic pain, and to analyze preferred cannabis strains, biochemical profiles, and prescription medication substitutions with cannabis.
Methods
Via electronic survey in medicinal cannabis patients with headache, arthritis, and chronic pain, demographics and patterns of cannabis use including methods, frequency, quantity, preferred strains, cannabinoid and terpene profiles, and prescription substitutions were recorded. Cannabis use for migraine among headache patients was assessed via the ID Migraine™ questionnaire, a validated screen used to predict the probability of migraine.
Results
Of 2032 patients, 21 illnesses were treated with cannabis. Pain syndromes accounted for 42.4% (
n
= 861) overall; chronic pain 29.4% (
n
= 598;), arthritis 9.3% (
n
= 188), and headache 3.7% (
n
= 75;). Across all 21 illnesses, headache was a symptom treated with cannabis in 24.9% (
n
= 505). These patients were given the ID Migraine™ questionnaire, with 68% (
n
= 343) giving 3 “Yes” responses, 20% (
n
= 102) giving 2 “Yes” responses (97% and 93% probability of migraine, respectively). Therefore, 88% (
n
= 445) of headache patients were treating probable migraine with cannabis. Hybrid strains were most preferred across all pain subtypes, with “OG Shark” the most preferred strain in the ID Migraine™ and headache groups. Many pain patients substituted prescription medications with cannabis (41.2–59.5%), most commonly opiates/opioids (40.5–72.8%). Prescription substitution in headache patients included opiates/opioids (43.4%), anti-depressant/anti-anxiety (39%), NSAIDs (21%), triptans (8.1%), anti-convulsants (7.7%), muscle relaxers (7%), ergots (0.4%).
Conclusions
Chronic pain was the most common reason for cannabis use, consistent with most registries. The majority of headache patients treating with cannabis were positive for migraine. Hybrid strains were preferred in ID Migraine™, headache, and most pain groups, with “OG Shark”, a high THC (Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol)/THCA (tetrahydrocannabinolic acid), low CBD (cannabidiol)/CBDA (cannabidiolic acid), strain with predominant terpenes β-caryophyllene and β-myrcene, most preferred in the headache and ID Migraine™ groups. This could reflect the potent analgesic, anti-inflammatory, and anti-emetic prop |
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ISSN: | 1129-2369 1129-2377 |
DOI: | 10.1186/s10194-018-0862-2 |