How cannabis soothes HIV symptoms
For about twenty years, the scientific community has been examining the effects of medical cannabis on the HIV retrovirus, which is responsible for AIDS. Many drug treatments are available on the market, but they often have severe side effects that impact patients' lives. Medical cannabis can thus combat fatigue, reduce weight loss, and decrease pain, but it may also slow the progression of the disease against the immune system.
A search for the most common diseases In American health programs, AIDS ranked among the most common reasons for prescribing medical cannabis, alongside chronic pain, epilepsy, various forms of cancer, glaucoma, post-traumatic stress disorder, as well as cachexia, spasms, and Alzheimer's.
Reduce mental decline
A study In the past, cannabis has proven effective in reducing HIV-related mental decline and cognitive impairment. Cannabis acts as an anti-inflammatory agent on the brains of individuals affected by HIV, preventing white blood cells and their proteins from spreading throughout the body.
Blood-brain barrier protection
Cannabis could act as a Blood-brain barrier protector, the blood-brain barrier, also called the blood-brain barrier (Blood-brain barrier, (BBB)). As HIV weakens the immune defenses and spreads primarily through blood, strengthening the BBB becomes crucial to slow the development of the disease.
Stimulate the appetite
Cannabis is known for stimulate the appetite, it is therefore effective in combating weight loss and anorexia associated with HIV. Thus, Keith Vines, a retired Air Force captain living with HIV, states that «My marijuana use is quite modest. I find that I need to take a few puffs two or three times a week, in the evening, to eat. There are also periods of weeks at a time when marijuana is useless. I don't smoke before or during business hours. I have not become addicted to cannabis.«
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