Monday, December 15, 2025
Home Blog Page 1091

Here Is How Medical Marijuana Can Help Sufferers Of Dystonia

Dystonia literally means “poor stretching” (although Liddell and Scott tell me it could also mean a “lamentable condition,” which is true enough, if vague for a medical term). It is a neurological disorder characterized by prolonged, sometimes painful, contractions that contort the limbs, neck, face, even the vocal cords.

You remember that Donald Trump bit where he mocks the disabled reporter? That’s dystonia.

Dystonia is the third most common motor disorder, after Parkinson’s disease and tremor, and it affects some 300,000 people in North America. It can appear on its own or as a symptom of Parkinson’s, Huntington’s, or other neurological diseases.

Related Story: Watch What Happens When This Parkinson’s Patient Smokes Marijuana

Cannabis has shown to have some positive effect on spasms and ticks, but the literature directly addressing dystonia is small, and it is limited to case reports (like this positive one) and preclinical studies (like this negative one)—which means that any findings carry no statistical weight.

A 2015 review of cannabis research for a variety of motor impediments, while optimistic in general, concludes that as far as dystonia is concerned: “benefit was not established beyond individual patients.” Nevertheless, it holds out hope that cannabis might “possibly” have a role in treatment.

Related Story: Here is Clinical Evidence That Marijuana Fights Epilepsy

Despite its thumbs down assessment, the report is an excellent primer for the whole branch of research. It deals directly with the complexity of the endocannabinoid system in a way that makes explicable researchers’ often contradictory findings——though, of course, without resolving them either.

Vets Cannot Recommend Medical Cannabis For Pets, But Love It Anyway

Though veterinarians in California are legally barred from recommending pet treats containing weed, medical cannabis for pets is on the rise and many say it’s for good reason.

Just like their owners, dogs and cats get sick or have psychological disorders. Cancer and anxiety top the list of pet problems that have their owners at marijuana dispensaries, picking up the special foods and treats.

The medicine is infused with CBD, not THC, so pets aren’t getting high, they’re getting treatment. This can be extremely important, especially with end of life issues, where the animal needs to be more comfortable.

Quality of life is another big factor. Many dogs, from little to big, have anxiety problems, whether it’s social anxiety, separation anxiety or generalized anxiety. Anecdotal evidence is building fast and the CBD biscuits are changing pets lives for the better.

Already there are plenty of examples on the market and once they start to regulate the process and have dosages down for different sized animals this has the potential to explode in popularity.

Like their human counterparts, pets need medications when they’re ill. Those medications are as much a part of Big Pharma as our own over the counter and doctor prescribed meds. CBD pet treats and medicines could cut down on medication costs for chronically ill pets and put the profits in the pockets of local craftspeople, for now.

With medical or legalized cannabis in 29 states and the District of Columbia, pot infused pet foods could be a major industry, with great monetary value.

There are also the side effects of pharmaceuticals. From upset stomach to kidney or liver damage, CBD is a lot safer for your pets. There are virtually no side effects, the CBD does not get your furry friend high, and marijuana has never been shown to cause a fatal overdose. Never.

So if you are one of the lucky Americans living in a legal state and also have a pet you love who needs some extra attention, head down to your local dispensary and ask some questions. There’s a good chance they’ll already be carrying a pet product or if not that they can get it in stock.

New York Vets With PTSD Can Now Use Medical Marijuana

In a ground-breaking victory for New York vets, Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Saturday signed a bill allowing state veterans to use medical marijuana as a treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder.

“Our veterans risked their lives in order to defend the ideals and principles that this nation was founded upon and it is our duty to do everything we can to support them when they return home,” Gov. Cuomo said during the Veterans Day parade in Manhattan. “Many of our veterans are suffering from PTSD and the medical community has determined that marijuana can be a helpful treatment in some areas.”

In New York, the qualifying conditions for medical marijuana include cancer, Parkinson’s disease, HIV, and a small number of serious conditions. But, until Cuomo’s action on Saturday, PTSD was omitted from the list.

Sen. Diane J. Savino, author of  S.5629 (the PTSD bill) was thrilled with the signing. “New York is home to some of the bravest service members in the nation and in addition to residents suffering from PTSD due to other traumatic experiences, this legislation will ensure that everyone receives the effective treatment they deserve,” Savino said in a statement. “I commend Gov. Cuomo for taking action to support our residents and veterans, and signing legislation that will help remedy a number of serious conditions affecting New Yorkers in communities across the state.”

It is estimated that nearly 20,000 New Yorkers with PTSD could benefit from the use of medical marijuana — and all are not veterans. The bill will also allow police officers, firefighters, and survivors of domestic violence, rape, violent crime, and accidents to use medical marijuana.

According to a recent national survey conducted on behalf of The American Legion, more than 20 percent of veterans use medical marijuana. Nearly 40 percent say they know a fellow vet who uses cannabis as a treatment for PTSD or other ailments. And 83 percent of veterans want medical marijuana to be legalized by the federal government.

The PTSD bill was one of five pieces of legislation signed on Saturday by Cuomo to help those who served our nation. The legislative package also includes:

  • Providing combat veterans employed by the State with additional days of paid leave to obtain health services, counseling and access to other benefits.
  • Waiving the civil service examination fee for veterans who were honorably discharged.
  • Requiring the Department of State and Division of Military and Naval Affairs to maintain a public list of all not-for-profit corporations that solicit funds for the armed forces of the United States.
  • Directing the Office of General Services to set aside a publicly accessible location within the State Capitol building for a POW/MIA chair and plaque to honor those veterans who have not yet returned home.

“From improving access to healthcare treatments and services, to removing barriers to employment, all five of these bills take important steps to ensure that veterans have every opportunity to continue succeeding when they return home,” Cuomo said.

This expensive $2,000 Margarita Serves 8

0

If you remember when Jimmy Buffett’s “Margaritaville” hit the airwaves, not only are you at least 40-years-old, you are probably too responsible with your income to drop big on a giant cocktail. Right? Right. But wait, you never now, this expensive $2,000 margarita serves 8, or $250 a person

In honor of the 40th anniversary of the song that makes everyone want to ditch work, hit the beach and get drunk on wine coolers (or at least change the station), the JWB (James William Buffett) steakhouse at the Margaritaville Resort in Hollywood, Florida is offering a deluxe Ruby Margarita for $1,977.

Related: 5 Easy Tequila Cocktails You Can Make At Home Year-Round

If you’re wondering if the rim of the margarita glass is encrusted with fine jewels, you are sorely mistaken. Instead, according to Coastal Living, that price will buy you an eight-person batch of margarita, a Margaritaville Frozen Concoction Maker®, a Margaritaville Beverage Dispenser, a Margaritaville Party Tub, and eight Margaritaville Margarita Glasses. That better be one stiff drink.

https://giphy.com/gifs/marc-maron-jimmy-buffett-zMKe8mXVdU1lS

This birthday deal is available from November 17-19.  If a Price Is Right Showcase Showdown-sized margarita package is not your thing, there’s a regular human-sized Ruby Margarita on offer at more than 30 Margaritaville locations through the month of November. For about $20, you get a souvenir cup along with your drink. Who wants to party like it’s 1977?

Just In Time For The Holidays! Greeting Cards For Your Cannabis Lover

Looking for an unconventional holiday card for the cannabis lover on your shopping list? Go Green.

Green Card Greetings launched its first collection of holiday cards/gift bags. The collection offers a range of greetings, including Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, Season’s Greetings, and Happy Hanukkah.

Earlier this year, Green Card Greetings released the first-of-its-kind greeting card gift bag for marijuana. The product combines a traditional greeting card with a food-grade, press and seal, adult-use gift bag that allows for gifting of any type of marijuana product: dry herb, pre-rolled joints, edibles, and concentrates. All greetings are matte printed to allow for easy personalization.

“Cannabis, edibles and other cannabis-related products make great holiday gifts. Gren Card Greetings are a convenient and thoughtful way to give green for the holiday,” said Erik Komurek, company founder and chief executive greeter.

As the legalization of recreational use marijuana continues to be adopted throughout the US, marijuana use itself has shed the stigmas of the past and is now being accepted as a consumer good. Currently, it is legal to gift marijuana, to anyone over 21 years old, in 8 states and the capital: Alaska, California, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, and Washington D.C.

“I love seeing people’s reaction when they realize they can gift any marijuana item with our gift card/bags,” Komurek said. “It is heartwarming to know that our product creates happiness and promotes giving. Putting smiles on people’s faces is the most fulfilling job I’ve ever had.”

Green Card Greetings supports responsible gifting. The greeting card gift bags include an envelope but are not intended to be mailed or shipped.  It is intended to be gifted personally, in the same manner as a wine bag.

The cards retail for $4.99. For more information, check out Green Card Greetings.

California Rastafarian Church Seeks Marijuana Exemption

0

A California Rastafarian church in is challenging a city ordinance banning smoking cannabis in public, claiming a religious exemption. Church leaders believe the herb is a holy sacrament and will allow their congregation to toke as part of the Eucharist.

According to a story in the San Jose Mercury News:

Although it sells marijuana products including edibles and smoking pipes in a small backroom, co-director Donny Lords insists that Coachella is not a pot dispensary as defined by the city of San Jose.

The Mercury News report says that churchgoers wishing to be part of the Cannabis Church must provide a photo ID proving they are 18 and pay a nominal registration fee. Qualified parishioners are then ushered into the chapel where they are allowed to partake during the weekly service.

According to Rev. David Dick, cannabis also has a long history of use as an entheogen. As Dick explains:

Entheogen literally means ‘generating the divine within’ or ‘makes God come into being.’ It is a plant whose psychoactive properties help put us in a more receptive state where we are open to the divine within us. Cannabis has been one of man’s earliest entheogens, and we at Coachella Valley Church offers cannabis as a holy sacrament, practiced by many spiritual traditions for thousands of years.

While the church’s flock may be pleased, some neighbors of the church are not. As the Mercury News reports:

Dave Henschel described Coachella as a phony operation similar to one that existed there a few years earlier.

“This is a farce, just as the church is a farce,” Henschel wrote in an email. “This dispensary is hiding under a church use in order to sell marijuana, that is all they are concerned about.”

The church’s YouTube page has been fairly active with more than 20 videos posted in the past six months. Below is a welcoming video:

This 12-Year-Old Girl Is Suing Jeff Sessions Over Marijuana Legalization

This time of year, many sixth graders are thinking about holiday break, what they want for Christmas, and how many days are left of school before summer break. But not Alexis Bortell. Her thoughts are way more litigious in nature. The 12-year-old has epilepsy. She and her family specifically moved from Texas to Colorado to access medical marijuana.

“As the seizures got worse, we had to move to Colorado to get cannabis because it’s illegal in Texas,” she told Denver’s FOX affiliate, KDVR TV.

Bortell says after moving to Larkspur, she began using a cannabis oil  to help her seizures. With just two drops of THC every day, she says she’s been seizure-free for more than two years; it’s a way better option, she says, than the brain surgery her hometown doctor had recommended. By the way, the marijuana is grown by Bortell’s dad, Dean, in their backyard.

The issue the Bortells face now is that they can’t return to Texas because of federal prohibition — a regulation that has prompted Alexis to join a lawsuit that seeks to legalize medical marijuana on the federal level. As it stands now, the DEA considers marijuana equal to heroin and more dangerous than meth or cocaine.

“When you look at it from a distance and you see it saving their lives, me as a father and an American, I go, what are we doing?,” Dean Bortell tells KDVR. “How could you possibly look at someone who`s benefiting from this as a medicine and threaten to take it away?”

Attorney Adam Foster, who represents the marijuana business side of things, says the lawsuit will be a long shot: “Whenever you sue the government, the deck is really stacked against you.”

That may be true, but the federal government has lost its first motion to have the case dismissed, so that’s something.

How Medical Marijuana Can Be A Part Of Tourette’s Syndrome Therapy

The neurological disorder Tourette’s syndrome (TS, if you like) is the most well known of a family of tick disorders that are all characterized by involuntary repetitive movements and vocalizations. Tourette’s is infamous for spectacular and uncontrollable fits of swearing. But coprolalia is present in only about 10 percent of cases. (I once heard a woman speak whose verbal tick was to say “hedgehog,” very, very frequently. As endearing as it was to us listeners, it was no easier on her than stammering shit-shit-shit.) Tics also commonly include sniffing, grunting, throat clearing, blinking, grimacing, shrugging, and general ants-in-your-pantsing.

Like autism, Tourette’s usually emerges in childhood and it heavily favors boys. It is often accompanied by a ADHD, obsessive compulsive disorder, and a host of behavior, learning, and mood disorders.

The idea that cannabis might be an effective treatment for Tourette’s was first suggested back in 1988. It was in a case study of three patients whose tics would subside after a joint or two. There’s still not a whole lot of research, but a good chunk of what has been done is the work of Kirsten Müller-Vahl of the Hannover Medical School.

Her latest paper on the subject (from 2013) is a very accessible overview of the research to date, in which she concludes that the data—although admittedly slight—“consistently provide evidence for beneficial effects of cannabinoids in the treatment of tics in patients with TS.” She also finds “weak evidence” that cannabis may also improve behavior problems associated with the illness, such as obsessive compulsive behavior, short attention, and impulsivity.

Despite Dr. Müller-Vahl’s optimistic prognosis, the clinical proof is simply not there yet. A 2009 paper from a British research group, which was the most comprehensive review of its time, found only two studies that met its criteria. It concluded—unsurprisingly—that “there was not enough evidence” to support the use of cannabinoids in treating tics and obsessive compulsive behavior in people with Tourette’s syndrome.” [That’s a legitimate British “-our” back there, and not my being a poseur slipping out again.]

That unenthusiastic position was seconded by the American Medical Association, in its own review of medical-marijuana literature from 2015. Because of small sample size, it concluded that there was only “low-quality evidence” for the efficacy of cannabis in treating Tourette’s.

Another review from that year, however, used looser criteria, admitting surveys and case reports, and found that tics caused by Tourette’s “did respond to cannabis preparations,” and concluded that there is a “promising role” for the drug in Tourette’s therapy.

These THC Infused Rolling Papers Will Get You Higher

0

TWAX rolling papers stand out from the rest, getting you high without even needing to add weed to your joints. Developed by The Clear, a cannabis concentrates company, these rolling papers have THC in them from the get go, containing 100 mg of 97 percent of THC oil, which equals to a whole lot of weed. This oil and paper combo is meant to burn out slowly, producing a longer lasting high and joints that can be shared with more people. You also don’t have to worry about any artificial extra smell or taste, because TWAX papers are meant to taste and feel like regular rolling papers, only getting you higher in the process.

While TWAX papers sound a little too good to be true, they do have a drawback, which is the fact that two packs of them are worth around 20 dollars. The rolling papers are a good option for special occasions and super joints that you want to share with your friends. TWAX papers probably won’t substitute RAW papers or whatever other brand of rolling papers you use. 

TWAX papers are currently available in medical dispensaries in Arizona, and will be available in other states with legalized marijuana in the coming months. These THC infused rolling papers are a nice addition to the cannabis community, providing a legit and safe product that was sorely lacking. We can’t wait to try some.

The 5 Cutting-Edge Gyms That Will Blow Your Mind

Tired of traditional gyms? Industry innovators around the world are adapting the gym we have come to know to reflect our modern tastes. Gone are the days when harsh lighting and a sweaty stench were part of the acceptable norm. This is 2017, and expectations for design and services are higher than ever. From the rocky terrain in Iran to the urban creativity in Tokyo, these are the world’s most cutting-edge gyms that will change the experience forever.

Illoiha Omotesando Fitness Gym

via GIPHY

Take what you thought you knew about rock climbing and turn it upside down with the daring designs at ILLOIHA. The two-story studio in Tokyo’s fashion district uses interior design elements like picture frames, mirrors, deer heads, bird cages and flower vases to create a challenging and unusual climb. Mount your way through the Alice In Wonderland-esque setting for a workout that you won’t forget.

Upper Limits

Bloomington, Illinois.

As one of the largest climbing facilities in the world with over 20,000-square-feet of climbing space, there is no shortage of ways to workout at Upper Limits, Bloomington. From a 65-foot silo to a 110-foot outdoor wall, this innovative setup has something for every kind of climber.

Nike World Headquarters

Beaverton, Oregon.

Innovation doesn’t stop at aesthetics, and while Nike World Headquarters is surely a sight for sore eyes, the real experience is in the details. The nature-lined track that surrounds the massive complex is a serene escape made out of 50,000 pairs of recycled Nike sneakers. Not bad, Nike. Not bad.

Rock Climbing Gym


Polur, Iran.

A design by New Wave Architecture is breaking the traditional confinements of indoor rock climbing with an intriguing project in Polur, Iran. The glacier-like structure leaves no surface unused, allowing climbers to scale every crevice of the building. The exterior is comprised of geometric panels fitted with hand-holds for climbing. A 360-degree manmade climbing experience amidst the rocky lands of Mazandaran.

Sky Wellness Fitness Center

Belgrade, Serbia.

Breaking a sweat may not seem so bad when it’s up in the sky. This structurally stunning appears to float in the Serbian skies while people enjoy world-class machines and facilities inside. The programming at Sky Wellness is as prominent as the building itself.

Don't Miss Your Weekly Dose of The Fresh Toast.

Stay informed with exclusive news briefs delivered directly to your inbox every Friday.

We respect your privacy. Unsubscribe anytime.