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USA First Placebo-Controlled Trial Finds Cannabis More Effective For Treating Migraine

In the first double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, vaporised cannabis was found to be more effective for treating acute migraine symptoms than a placebo.


While preclinical and retrospective studies have suggested cannabinoids may be effective in migraine treatment, according to the researchers, until now, there have been no randomised clinical trials examining these effects in adults with acute migraine symptoms.

The randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover trial – widely considered the gold standard in clinical research – involved 92 participants, of which 83% were female.

Individuals were treated for up to four separate migraine attacks – 247 migraine attacks in total – with vaporised THC-dominant, CBD-dominant, and a balanced CBD/THC cannabis flower, alongside a placebo.

Researchers specifically examined the effects of each type of cannabis on pain relief, as well as complete freedom from pain, and the participants’ ‘most bothersome symptoms’.

The results, published in the journal Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain, found that participants who used a combination of THC and CBD reported significant pain reduction and improvement in their ‘most bothersome symptom’ within 2 hours of treatment.

Around 67% of people reported meaningful pain relief with cannabis containing a balance of THC and CBD, compared to 47% with a placebo, with around 60% reporting complete pain freedom, compared to 35%.

Freedom from the most bothersome symptoms, such as nausea and light sensitivity, was also achieved more often with the balanced cannabis (60%) than with the placebo (35%).

No serious adverse events were reported, and benefits were sustained at 24 and 48 hours.

The THC-dominant cannabis was also superior to placebo for pain relief, with 68.9% of participants, compared to 46.6%, but not pain freedom or most bothersome symptom freedom at the two-hour mark.

Meanwhile, CBD-dominant cannabis was not superior to the placebo for pain relief, pain freedom, or most bothersome symptom freedom.

READ MORE: Could cannabis inhalation help with migraine management?

“First compelling evidence” for cannabis in migraine treatment


The researchers say the findings suggest that a vaporised, balanced cannabis flower may be a viable treatment for acute migraine in patients who do not respond to standard therapies.

Speaking to Medscape, the study’s senior author, Dr Nathaniel M. Schuster, a pain/headache neurologist, said: “This is the first placebo-controlled study in this space. It’s the first real — to—me—compelling evidence for the antimigraine effects of cannabis in humans.

The authors also argue that the fact that the study was conducted independently from the industry strengthens its findings, although more large-scale, long-term studies on benefit and risk are still needed.

“In this first randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial testing the efficacy of cannabinoids for the acute treatment of migraine, vaporized 6% THC + 11% CBD cannabis flower was superior to placebo for pain relief, pain freedom, and MBS freedom at 2 h as well as 24-h sustained pain freedom and sustained MBS freedom and 48-h sustained MBS freedom,” the authors wrote.

“Strengths of the study include that it was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study conducted with foundation funding and cannabis from the NIDA DSP and without industry involvement. However, this also limits the generalizability of the study’s findings to commercial products used by patients in real-world settings.”

They add: “Future research should include multicenter RCTs and long-term studies of benefits and risks with repeated use.”

The post First Placebo-Controlled Trial Finds Cannabis More Effective For Treating Migraine appeared first on Cannabis Health News.

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@Delta 9, possibly nothing you don't know here mate, but thought it worth a tag if you're interested so you don't miss it
Its promising for alot of sufferers , with no terpenes involved then it would be interesting to see where , how long and what product used , could even be a nasal spray if they could find it as an abortive.

My latest purchase for migraine therapy is frankincense resin , Not had a headache since and cleared my chest and sinus , amazing stuff. Bought copal, dragons blood and myrrh resins to try , Have a look at them
 
So pleased to read this, particularly “the findings suggest that a vaporised, balanced cannabis flower may be a viable treatment for acute migraine in patients who do not respond to standard therapies”.. after a bit of hit and miss trial and error with my first 2 prescriptions I’ve found an effective range of flowers that work to reduce and ease my symptoms (Indica leaning Hybrid / T27+). I seem to react well to a wide range or terpenes and am just starting to trial some slightly more Sativa leaning strains to see if they can be as effective.
 
@Delta 9

Its good to see it get traction n took a bit serious as i wouldnt mind 40g of 6* full melt hash on the NHS a month😂😂. But it does help alot at breaking them up so less 3 day migraines n more 1 day , extracts would be key maybe looking into hashishene if finding releaf with Myrcene etc Caryophyllene also. Humulene can be good. Thats the 3 for me extract and flower with THC. Some of my worst ones went away after vomit and emptying bowels so defo gut brain connection playing a big part and BIO KULT MIGREA have helped a bit. Maybe a probiotic/cannabinoid combo could work wonders. 40g hash is better though 😂
 
Some further thought on THC Sensitivity & headache management because for some of us, THC seems to be the main factor shaping our experience—sometimes more so than terpenes or strain genetics. This can mean that different products end up feeling quite similar, such as leading to sedation across the board.

Based on my own journey with both medical and non-medical cannabis, I've come to believe I may have a higher sensitivity to THC. I take regular tolerance breaks and always stay well within my prescribed limit.

Looking back over many years of use, I think this shift began for me around the mid-2000s. At that point, I found I could no longer tell strains apart by their effects—they all felt fairly generic. I can still appreciate different aromas and flavors, but these days, I can usually predict how a product will affect me just by looking at its THC level.

I use cannabis to help manage migraines and headaches related to a meningioma tumour. As the above recent study suggested, I've naturally gravitated toward higher-THC strains, and my clinic doctor also encouraged this approach (there can be good reasons for it, after all).

The only real challenge I've noticed is that for daytime use, I need to be gentle with my dosing on certain strains—otherwise, I can end up feeling more sedated or foggy than I'd like (for example, with Hawaiian Fanta). Taking it slow helps me find the right balance.

Wishing everyone well on their own journeys. 🌿
 
Some further thought on THC Sensitivity & headache management because for some of us, THC seems to be the main factor shaping our experience—sometimes more so than terpenes or strain genetics. This can mean that different products end up feeling quite similar, such as leading to sedation across the board.

Based on my own journey with both medical and non-medical cannabis, I've come to believe I may have a higher sensitivity to THC. I take regular tolerance breaks and always stay well within my prescribed limit.

Looking back over many years of use, I think this shift began for me around the mid-2000s. At that point, I found I could no longer tell strains apart by their effects—they all felt fairly generic. I can still appreciate different aromas and flavors, but these days, I can usually predict how a product will affect me just by looking at its THC level.

I use cannabis to help manage migraines and headaches related to a meningioma tumour. As the above recent study suggested, I've naturally gravitated toward higher-THC strains, and my clinic doctor also encouraged this approach (there can be good reasons for it, after all).

The only real challenge I've noticed is that for daytime use, I need to be gentle with my dosing on certain strains—otherwise, I can end up feeling more sedated or foggy than I'd like (for example, with Hawaiian Fanta). Taking it slow helps me find the right balance.

Wishing everyone well on their own journeys. 🌿
Observations is key to nailing it down. Would you be using it then as a preventer more so than an aborter ?
It may be the vasodialation effects of THC that may cause your sensitivity also if observing how you handle onset but hard to tell difference with THC onset and primary terp as both work together but there is a triphasic effect as regards onset blood pressure which means down up down , It will affect heart rate. That euphoric up in the middle i have observed to how it may affect me and i noticed terpinolene within trainwreck had a rocket to the moon effect but i dont have same sensitivity with terpinolene with other strains. It might be a certain terp thats causing sensitivity.

Low n slow is best way. A few friends of mine have adverse effects on cannabis because they dont use it often enough so every use the have adverse effects because of this. Their CB1 Medical receptors are upregulated to the max so 1 puff is all it takes to activate them all causing a very euphoric onset and heavy sedation afterwards.

I find CBD upregulates perfectly without any need to upregulate cb1s through tolerance breaks as that will always be the cause of sensitivity as i see often. Having epilepsy tolerance breaks are too dangerous for so CBD upregulation for me and it can calm THC sensitivity almost instantly.

You having a meningioma tumour may affect headaches and cb1 upregulation in a different way to me going away and coming back to it resets and may make worse or cause THC sensitivity.
 
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