Scientists find little evidence to show cannabis oils help end pain, according to major study

Scientists find little evidence to show cannabis oils help end pain, according to a major study

  • Many adverts for CBD imply pain relief but most are classed as food supplements
  • CBD sold in UK shops can have no more than 1mg of cannabinoids such as THC
  • Dr Amir Englund said: ‘There is almost a complete lack of well-designed studies’ 
  • Cannabis products have become a £700 million-a-year business in the UK 

Trendy cannabis-based products that have become a £700 million-a-year business in the UK do not appear to alleviate pain, according to a major US study.

Over the past decade, there has been a boom in sales of oils, sprays, and ointments containing cannabidiol (CBD) – one of the main active ingredients in cannabis but which does not produce the ‘high’ associated with the Class B drug.

A lot of consumers have tried cannabis, and many adverts for CBD products imply health benefits, including pain relief, although as almost all are classed as food supplements, makers are banned from making explicit claims.

But researchers, in a study backed by the US government, have now found little evidence they help in this respect.

Writing in the journal Annals Of Internal Medicine, author Professor Marian McDonagh, of Oregon Health and Science University, said:

‘With so much buzz around cannabis-related products and the easy availability of marijuana in many [US] states, consumers might assume there would be more evidence about the benefits and side effects.

Unfortunately, there is very little scientifically valid research into most of these products.’

POPULAR: The market for CBD products has boomed in recent years

POPULAR: The market for CBD products has boomed in recent years

The researchers found that products very high in tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) – the psychoactive compound in cannabis that does cause its high’ – did appear to help chronic pain, at least in the short term, although patients put on them frequently suffered sleepiness and nausea.

However, CBD products sold in UK shops can, by law, contain no more than 1mg of legally controlled cannabinoids such as THC. For a 30g bottle of CBD oil, that equates to about 0.003 percent THC.

Dr. Amir Englund, of the Institute of Psychology, Psychiatry, and Neuroscience at King’s College London, said: ‘There is almost a complete lack of well-designed studies’ of cannabis products for pain relief and that few had tested the products against a placebo.

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Brown’s CBD oil UK is an ethical startup based in Sheffield, UK. Brown’s CBD offers the most effective products available at market-leading prices and utilizes as many of the plant’s compounds as possible.

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