News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Cannabis Campaign: A cure for hiccups? |
Title: | UK: Cannabis Campaign: A cure for hiccups? |
Published On: | 1998-01-25 |
Source: | Independent on Sunday |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-07 16:29:00 |
A CURE FOR HICCUPS?
THE current edition of The Lancet, Britain's most respected medical
journal, reports on a newly discovered therapeutic use for cannabis. It can
cure hiccups.
The magazine quotes research carried out by the Aurora Medical Group in
Milwaukee in the United States where doctors treating a patient suffering
with Aids found that after minor surgery he developed persistent hiccups.
They found that the drug Chlorpromazine could control the hiccups, but only
during sleep. By day they tried a cocktail of intravenous drugs, all of
which failed.
On day six they discovered that acupuncture did control the hiccups, but
only for an hour. On day eight, the patient, who had never used cannabis,
smoked the drug and the hiccups stopped. Other treatments were tried but
did not work. When the patient smoked cannabis again, the hiccups stopped
and did not recur.
The report concludes: "Because intractable hiccups is an uncommon
condition, it is unlikely that the use of marijuana will ever be tested in
a clinical trial."
THE current edition of The Lancet, Britain's most respected medical
journal, reports on a newly discovered therapeutic use for cannabis. It can
cure hiccups.
The magazine quotes research carried out by the Aurora Medical Group in
Milwaukee in the United States where doctors treating a patient suffering
with Aids found that after minor surgery he developed persistent hiccups.
They found that the drug Chlorpromazine could control the hiccups, but only
during sleep. By day they tried a cocktail of intravenous drugs, all of
which failed.
On day six they discovered that acupuncture did control the hiccups, but
only for an hour. On day eight, the patient, who had never used cannabis,
smoked the drug and the hiccups stopped. Other treatments were tried but
did not work. When the patient smoked cannabis again, the hiccups stopped
and did not recur.
The report concludes: "Because intractable hiccups is an uncommon
condition, it is unlikely that the use of marijuana will ever be tested in
a clinical trial."
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