EXCLUSIVE: Exhausted From The Pandemic? New Research Shows Cannabis Flower Is Effective For Treating Fatigue

Cannabis flower is effective for treating symptoms of fatigue. This is according to real-time data collected by University of New Mexico (UNM) researchers.

What Happened

Using a mobile software app to measure the effects of consuming different types of common and commercially available cannabis flower products on fatigue levels in real-time, UNM researchers found that more than 91% of people in the study sample that used cannabis flower to treat fatigue reported symptom improvement.

People who consumed cannabis cigarettes, or joints, to combust the flower reported greater symptom relief than pipe or vaporizer users.

Why It Matters

Fatigue is a core feature of many types of illnesses. Several studies have shown that people with chronic pain, cancer, Parkinson’s disease and multiple sclerosis report increased energy levels after consuming medical cannabis. Other research shows patients are increasingly supplementing or switching entirely from conventional pharmaceutical prescription medications to medical cannabis, demonstrating a revealed preference for using this ancient and natural form of medicine.

In their recent study, titled “The Effects of Consuming Cannabis Flower for Treatment of Fatigue” published in the journal Medical Cannabis and Cannabinoids, UNM researchers showed that using cannabis results in immediate improvement for feelings of fatigue in the majority of users. This was the first large-scale study to show that, on average, people are likely to experience a 3.5 point improvement of feelings of fatigue on a 0-10 scale after combusting Cannabis flower products, conventionally referred to as “buds.”

“Despite the conventional beliefs that frequent Cannabis use may result in decreased behavioral activity, goal-pursuit, and competitiveness, or what academics have called ‘amotivational syndrome,’ people tend to actually experience an immediate boost in their energy levels immediately after consuming cannabis,” explained co-author, Dr. Jacob Miguel Vigil of the University of New Mexico psychology department.

Methodology

The study was based on data from 3,922 cannabis self-administration sessions recorded by 1,224 people using a patented mobile software application, the Releaf App, a highly rated app designed to help users record varying characteristics of the cannabis they purchase and monitor real-time changes in their symptom intensity and experienced side effects.

Because cannabis plants are so variable in their chemical compositions, consumers are often challenged with the ever-changing availability of strain-specific plant batches. The Releaf App enables users to keep an electronic diary of user session-specific effects for self-monitoring and self-directed cannabis use.      

“One of the most surprising outcomes of this study is that cannabis in general yielded improvements in symptoms of fatigue, rather than just a subset of products, such as those with higher THC or CBD levels or products characterized as Sativa rather than Indica,” added co-author, Dr. Sarah Stith from the economics department at UNM.

“At the same time,” continued Vigil “our observation that the major cannabinoids tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabidiol (CBD) were largely uncorrelated with changes in feelings of fatigue suggest that other minor cannabinoids and phytochemicals such as terpenes may be more influential on the effects of using cannabis than previously believed. In the near future, I anticipate that patients will have the opportunity to access more individualized cannabis products, with distinct and known combinations of chemical profiles for treating their specific health needs and lifestyles.”

For Tyler Dautrich, COO at MoreBetter, which created the Releaf App, “This obviously has implications for patients experiencing fatigue as a symptom of their medical condition, but we also believe this can lead to healthier options for individuals dealing with general day-to-day fatigue.”

This investigation was supported in part by private donations from individuals to the University of New Mexico Medical Cannabis Research Fund (MCRF). Descriptions of similar research can be found on MCRF’s YouTube educational channel, Cannabis Connection University.

Photo by Zohre Nemati on Unsplash

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