Is the hype about CBD, or cannabidiol, real?

Via SF Gate

Hemp-derived CBD oil products are available at The Botanical Shoppe on Friday, Oct. 5, 2018. Photo: Billy Calzada, Staff Photographer

Not that long ago, I would not have been able to tell you what the acronym “CBD” stood for, let alone what it was used for. CBD, or cannabidiol, is most commonly extracted from hemp, but it can also come from marijuana plants, which is why it is sometimes confused with its trippy chemical cousin THC. Unlike CBD, THC produces a high when smoked or eaten.

Today, we are living in a CBD world, with tinctures, ointments and vaping oils popping up everywhere. Celebrities from Gwyneth Paltrow to Willie Nelson are CBD believers, and if you frequent the right coffee shops, you can even get a shot of cannabidiol in your latte.

In my small North Carolina town, a flier at the local convenience store exhorts me to “experience the phenomenon” of CBD products, promising it can provide “relief from” diabetes, alcoholism, schizophrenia, back and knee pain, and other conditions.

“Everybody who buys the product comes back and raves about it – including my mother,” the enthusiastic checkout clerk says.

And, I must add, including me.

I am now taking a CBD tincture daily. After all the hype, I wanted to see whether it might have a positive impact on my lifelong struggle against depression. (To be clear, the tincture I use is based on hemp-derived CBD, which contains less than 0.3 percent THC, which is short for tetrahydrocannabinol. That’s not enough to get high even if I drank the entire bottle, several experts explained.)

Despite the growing popularity of CBD, the science supporting the claims remains pretty slim at this point. So why so much interest in a substance researchers still know so little about? I’d say hype, hope and big bucks. To date, the Food and Drug Administration has approved only one drug containing CBD, Epidiolex, for previously uncontrollable pediatric seizures. (To get the FDA’s OK, a new drug must be rigorously studied in clinical trials.)

The Hemp Business Journal estimates that the hemp CBD market totaled $190 million last year in a category that didn’t exist five years ago.

By 2022, the Brightfield Group, a cannabis and CBD market research firm, says sales are expected to reach $22 billion. The December passage of the 2018 farm bill will certainly help; the measure amended the term “marihuana” to exempt hemp as a controlled substance as long as it contains no more than 0.3 percent THC. Laura Freeman, chief executive of Homestead Alternatives, a Kentucky maker of CBD products, told me that “this is the first bright spot we’ve had in farming in a long time. We finally have a crop that has potential.”

With that kind of enthusiasm, as one CBD-user asked me, “What’s the harm?”

That’s an excellent question, says Donald Abrams, an oncologist and professor of clinical medicine at the University of California at San Francisco. In fact, he says, “we really don’t know anything” about CBDs.

Abrams is a member of a National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine committee that issued the most comprehensive report to date on the evidence related to the health benefits of cannabis and cannabinoids.

That report did not include hemp-based CBD; it covered only CBD products that included THC derived from marijuana, also known as medical marijuana. (Remember: it’s the THC that makes users high and it’s why medical marijuana is still illegal in many states.) Abrams says, however, that in vitro and animal studies do suggest many potential therapeutic applications for hemp-based CBD.

Several studies have found CBD to be harmless, which is to say safe, but that’s very different from proving its effectiveness. Abrams told me there have been only five randomized clinical trials that have looked at CBD, until the Epidiolex studies. The largest of those studies was a 24-person trial. Yep, that’s small.

Even if there were more evidence that CBD works wonders, we would still have the question of what CBD-based products actually contain.

Not all states require CBD manufacturers to accurately label their products. With scant regulation, consumers should be skeptical. The source matters, too, since heavy metals or other contaminants have been found in some hemp grown in China or Eastern Europe.

“People who are buying them on Amazon, or at their local health food store, are really working without a (safety) net,” says Michael Backes, author of “Cannabis Pharmacy: The Practical Guide to Medical Marijuana.”

In a 2017 study, Marcel Bonn-Miller, an adjunct assistant professor in the psychiatry department at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine, said his team found that nearly 70 percent of CBD products they analyzedwere mislabeled.

About 40 percent of the 84 items were “under-labeled,” meaning they had significantly more CBD than indicated. In addition, approximately a quarter were “over-labeled,” meaning consumers not only are paying good money for an ingredient they are not getting but also may not be getting a large enough dose to achieve any potential therapeutic benefit. More concerning, Bonn-Miller says, is that some CBD products may contain THC in amounts that could make you intoxicated or impaired

Yikes – users could inadvertently drive under the influence, test positive on a workplace drug screen or experience what Bonn-Miller calls “a number of negative consequences, ranging from addiction to cognitive impairment, anxiety – particularly at high doses – and risk of psychosis.”

Speaking of doses, just what is the right amount?

The “recommended serving size” on my bottle of CBD tincture is 1 milliliter a day. I think I speak for most consumers when I say serving size is the way to measure chocolates, not medicines. But the FDA won’t allow CBD producers to make any marketing claims – which includes recommended doses. Other brands may recommend a greater or smaller daily dose because doses aren’t standardized and because CBD products come in different strengths. As Abrams told me, it’s really “the wild west” out there.

Despite these concerns, Ziva Cooper, an associate professor of clinical neurobiology at Columbia University’s Irving Medical Center, who is doing research with CBD, says “based on animal studies, there seems to be a lot of promise for a number of disease states,” including its potential effects on inflammation, which could make it effective against multiple sclerosis, autoimmune disorders and addiction. More important, she told me, CBD may be therapeutic for “ailments for which there aren’t necessarily great medicines” – such as those pediatric seizure disorders and many others.

About three months ago, I added a CBD tincture to the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor medication I take for depression. My psychopharmacologist told me there was no specific contraindication or reason against taking both, but stressed that there’s no data on how the two behave together. There are some known contraindications with other medications, including Warfarin, codeine and oxycodone, but not SSRIs. “It’s not that there’s no contraindication,” Cooper said. “We just don’t know.”

Taking Bonn-Miller’s advice, I found the batch number on the bottle of my tincture and called the manufacturer in Kentucky to verify what’s in it. Fortunately, the label was exactly on the mark in terms of CBD content. The testing lab also confirmed there were no heavy metals in my product. I hope that reputable makers would be honest about lab analyses of what’s in their CBD products, but, if not, how would we know? The answer: We wouldn’t.

Since I’ve been using CBD, my mood has been significantly elevated and stable, although I understand my experience proves nothing. The placebo effect can be strong, especially for health symptoms modulated by the brain. Cooper encouraged me to continue talking with my doctor because “these powerful stories, as well as evidence from preclinical or animal studies, help drive the basis for rigorous studies.”

Such rigor is what’s needed to prove – or disprove – the anecdotal information about CBD. A market this size, with such enormous health consequences, should be based on more than hype and hope.

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43 Comments
Ruso Paisa
Ruso Paisa
January 9, 2019 5:33 pm

I buy the full spectrum oil from the marijuana plant here in Colombia for $6 per 25ml bottle. I’ve been using it for the past year and can say definitively that it has helped with my back pain. In addition, it helps me sleep and elevates my overall mood

no one
no one
  Ruso Paisa
January 9, 2019 6:16 pm

Is it available via online sales? or is it against the law for me to order from Missouri?

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
  no one
January 10, 2019 12:28 am

Find someone you trust. Try to avoid online. It’s legal in all 50 states.
My daughter gets it from a pharmacy in Harrisonville.

Ruso Paisa
Ruso Paisa
  no one
January 10, 2019 9:48 am

It’s not legal to import into the U.S. as far as I know.

anon
anon
  Ruso Paisa
January 10, 2019 10:41 am

why would anyone bother trying to import pot into the us?

Diogenes
Diogenes
  no one
January 10, 2019 1:08 pm

cbdistillery mail order. Independent testing showed their product to be extremely pure. Sure works for me.

Pequiste
Pequiste
January 9, 2019 5:34 pm

Brompton’s cocktails for everyone!
Couldn’t hurt.
Cheers.

Anonymous
Anonymous
January 9, 2019 5:48 pm

I’m on the fence for CBD. I’ve tried it in honey/tea and didn’t really notice any benefit (for calming as suggested). Now Kratom–that’s one very useful supplement. It’s helped me cut back on drinking substantially. The side affect (for me) is some annoying nausea at first. Many are using it to help kick the hillbilly heroin addiction.

EL Coyote (EC)
EL Coyote (EC)
January 9, 2019 5:50 pm

Fuck you all, Maggie said it cured her dog’s dyslexia.

EL Coyote (EC)
EL Coyote (EC)
  EL Coyote (EC)
January 9, 2019 9:09 pm

“The dog I called JFISH was horrible at piano until I took him to the vet and discovered he was dyslexic. I thought that was it, he would never play the piano but then one day, I tried cannabinoid extract (CBD) and wonder of wonders, he could play Stairway to Heaven perfectly although he had trouble with Fur Elise.” – Maggie

Morongobill
Morongobill
  EL Coyote (EC)
January 10, 2019 9:19 am

They laughed when JFISH sat down at the piano…

EL Coyote (EC)
EL Coyote (EC)
  Morongobill
January 10, 2019 10:36 am

That’s the hook to an old ad. Good one!

Sam Fox
Sam Fox
January 9, 2019 6:19 pm

To help answer Admin’s Q’s & misgivings expressed in his article, here is a list of sites that inform on research done by Israeli scientists. Israel is also a medical marijuana nation.

https://duckduckgo.com/?q=israli+studies+of+cannabis+conclude&t=h_&ia=web

Those who don’t know the truth about why cannabis was made illegal, here is one site that explains it.

Why is Marijuana Illegal?

Also at Drug War Rant there is a list of drug war victims. Check that out.

A LOT of people would be alive today if WR Hurst had not conned Congress into prohibiting marijuana. From pot prohibition we got the war on some drugs. The WOSD is now more deadly than the prohibited substances in terms of cause of death & loss of liberty & property. Rx drugs alone FAR outpace illegal stuff in terms of dead people.

Prohibitions never work. They only titillate the ‘forbidden fruit’ aspect & temptation to rebel in regard to what is banned.

Also research Portugal’s New Drug Policies. They have a pretty good success rate. Not perfect, but they have substantially reduced the use of illegal drugs & potential harm caused by overuse. One very wise thing they did was to treat drug use as a medical issue rather than a criminal one.

SamFox

K Vizzle
K Vizzle
January 9, 2019 6:28 pm

Stopped reading at may cause addiction

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
January 9, 2019 6:29 pm

This might be more closely related than it appears.
Traditional Masculinity is harmful according to the American Psychobabble Association. Mary and her children like CBD’s reduce or even neuter traditional macho males. So do Opiates. Amazing how the attacks on macho pricks from TPTB has coincided with the relaxing of laws and attitudes about those drugs. Now the doctors have another weapon to attack us with.
Just thinking out loud.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Fleabaggs
January 10, 2019 10:07 am

I’m not sure how you linked pharmacuetical opiates to Cbd and then jumped to neutering macho males but I can tell you that I use it daily for pain and inflamation and still manage to fuck my girl twice daily. Not sure if it’s the daily dose of cannabis oil or a daily regime of fresh pinapple but I’m not changing anything.

22winmag - Q is a Psyop and Trump is lead actor
22winmag - Q is a Psyop and Trump is lead actor
January 9, 2019 6:37 pm

Just like fake food, a large percentage of weed and other drugs are misrepresented as “fresh” and “premium.”

anon
anon

if someone actually tries to sell you “fresh” pot. they’re an idiot.

Stucky
Stucky
January 9, 2019 7:05 pm

“…. promising it can provide “relief from” diabetes, alcoholism, schizophrenia, back and knee pain, and other conditions.”

Complete utter horseshit. Worse than Snake Oil. Just the latest FUCKING FAD in American consumer gullibility ….. a history spanning hundreds of years. It seems to be mostly an American trait to believe in magical pills or lotions …. there’s ALWAYS SOMETHING out there that promises to cure what-ever-the-fuck ails you. And we spend BILLIONS every year on this bullshit.

(Although I will tell you this …. last year I bought a pill that promised to double the size of Mah Pecker in just three months. Sure ’nuff … I now need two hands to choke Little Stucky. Truth!)

======================================= =

Origin of “snake oil”.

“The 1800s saw thousands of Chinese workers arriving in the United States as indentured laborers to work on the Transcontinental Railroad. According to historian Richard White’s book Railroaded, about 180,000 Chinese immigrated to the United States between 1849 and 1882. The vast majority of the workers came from peasant families in southeastern China and were signed to contracts that ran up to five years for relatively low wages (compared with their white counterparts), wrote David Haward Bain in his book Empire Express.

Among the items the Chinese railroad workers brought with them to the States were various medicines — including snake oil. Made from the oil of the Chinese water snake, which is rich in the omega-3 acids that help reduce inflammation, snake oil in its original form really was effective, especially when used to treat arthritis and bursitis. The workers would rub the oil, used for centuries in China, on their joints after a long hard day at work. The story goes that the Chinese workers began sharing the oil with some American counterparts, who marveled at the effects.”

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  Stucky
January 9, 2019 9:07 pm

What’s your basis for saying “horseshit”? If you don’t mind my asking, has your son tried it?

Ruso Paisa
Ruso Paisa
  Stucky
January 10, 2019 10:01 am

Have you actually tried it Stucky? Most of the bullshit that they sell in the U.S. is snakeoil. I don’t have that problem here because I buy directly from the grower and as cheap as it is I can experiment with different batches at minimal cost.

no one
no one
  Ruso Paisa
January 10, 2019 10:27 am

I “know” a grower or two but it still isn’t cheap. And even though Missouri passed the medical marijuana issue last November, my doctor suggests I first look at federal law about gun ownership and marijuana possession (the herb, NOT the oil because I want to make my own tinctures and oil.) I told him I could sign my guns over to my husband and he gave me that old US Navy doctor look and shrugged. I know what he means… they would still be in the house and who knows what the nanny state will allow for me to make my own herbal medicine, much less use it.

So, if I do make my own medicine here, it will be the old fashioned way: Cash purchase from someone I trust living in Colorado or Michigan.

Ruso Paisa
Ruso Paisa
  no one
January 10, 2019 11:43 am

Here in Colombia I can buy a kilo of marijuana for $125. The ratio for plant to pure extract is 10-1. So for $125 I can make 100 grams. That is heavily diluted further with olive oil back to 1 liter. Of course you can grow it for free (20 plants are completely legal to grow) with a year round growing season yielding 4 crops a year.

no one
no one
  Ruso Paisa
January 10, 2019 11:50 am

I had no idea things were so different there. Why are my images of Columbia so violent? Oh, it is because I was indoctrinated in the necessity of the War on Drugs and we all know about that evil Columbian Cartel.

I have only seen Columbia from about five miles up from seat 5. And that’s all I can say about that.

Ruso Paisa
Ruso Paisa
  no one
January 10, 2019 12:03 pm

It still is violent. I Just recently saw a guy get thrown off his moto and stabbed to death right in front of my building. A family dispute where the stepson killed the stepfather. Two cops showed up (on one moto) 20 minutes later even though the police station is 3 blocks away. They came, took a report, drank a juice and rode away. It’s a whole different world down here. Overall though the benefits far outweigh the negatives for me. Especially in terms of personal freedom, quality of life, and cost of living. O yeah, and a gorgeous 18 year old girl that takes great care of me!

Anonymous
Anonymous
January 9, 2019 7:21 pm

this article is a joke

here’s some particularly hilarious points.

they say “a number of negative consequences, ranging from addiction to cognitive impairment, anxiety – particularly at high doses – and risk of psychosis.”

and end with

” A market this size, with such enormous health consequences ”

OK.
so… dig in to that thought for more than a minute. start with this point they make

“There are some known contraindications with other medications, including Warfarin, codeine and oxycodone, but not SSRIs. ”

now all you have to do is look up the “negative consequences” of these 4 substances.
their list of side effects and ways your life will be ruined are FAR more dire than what CBD would ever do to a person.

now, naturally. “consumers” SHOULD be skeptical of where the CBD comes from.

I have zero hope for legality providing legitimate markets in this manner.

but you know, if you’re not an idiot. and you KNOW YOUR DEALER.
then the only downsides are your own stupidity and lack of self discipline in the matter.

trying out some CBD is not going to rupture your internal organs or permanently screw up how your brain works.

so , again. “A market this size, with such enormous health consequences, should be based on more than hype and hope.”

what a hilarious and inane way to end the article… every “medicine” that big pharma has traditionally pushed out, is entirely based on “hype and hope” and there’s a complete lack of rigorous testing ACROSS THE BOARD when it comes to the FDA.

so if you want to believe a non-argument like that… well… your loss?

(Disclaimer: my father is currently recovering from hip surgery and his main ‘medication’ is CBD oil taken orally, to a major relief on his part. and it was his idea from the start to try it.)

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
January 10, 2019 11:17 am

B+ grade on your comment, with an upvote.
Why not an A+?
You posted as Anonymous.
Allowed, yet detracts a bit, from trust and familiarity; hence consideration of full blown acceptance, imho.
FWIW, I’m guilty of it myself, from T2T.

AC
AC
January 9, 2019 8:38 pm

comment image

Buy hey, some people blow $10 a day on Starbucks coffee. If you want to take this stuff, it’s your business.

BL
BL
January 9, 2019 9:57 pm

My daughter gave me a bottle in July, I have not opened so I have no clue about the benefits. Did not know people put it in their lattes, I might try that. Thanks for the info.

EL Coyote (EC)
EL Coyote (EC)
January 9, 2019 10:04 pm
Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  EL Coyote (EC)
January 9, 2019 10:44 pm

That reminds me that I’m supposed to get a colonoscopy.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  EL Coyote (EC)
January 10, 2019 9:38 am

Back in ’91 I worked with Tommy at a club in Winnipeg called Deja Vu (in the middle of Winter). He was a very big draw back then and every show was sold out. One night a guy asked me if I could take him to talk to Tommy but I told him he didn’t like to be disturbed before the show, so he asked me to give him a package. I went back in the club and discovered it was filled with huge joints and being me, I simply passed them out to the people in the line as they came into the club.

Years later I was in a comedy competition in Vail, Colorado as a finalist and for the final show they brought in Tommy to headline while the judges made their decision (I won audience favorite, but only took third from the judges). While we were hanging around the lodge someone told me to tell the story about the Winnipeg weed hijack to his agent. He thought it was hysterical and when Tommy showed up later he insisted I tell the story to him. He didn’t remember me (he didn’t remember being in Winnipeg either, so there’s that) and as I told the story he watched me tell it stone faced. At the end of the story he said “Then you owe me a pound of weed, man.” Turns out it wasn’t a gift from a fan, it was something he’d ordered from a local grower.

I thought he was a very nice guy and I’m glad he’s doing well.

no one
no one
  hardscrabble farmer
January 10, 2019 11:59 am

That one deserves a title and a repost in my humble opinion.

Lager
Lager
  hardscrabble farmer
January 10, 2019 12:07 pm

Filing that story under Great Tales From The Front Lines.
Loved it.
Maybe he’d take reparations in the form of Maple syrup?
…when you get back on your hooves after healing, and resume your passions.
Cheers.

Tactical Zen
Tactical Zen
January 9, 2019 10:13 pm

All that one needs to consider is this:

CBD (alone) was schedule 1 – no research was allowed at all.

It changed (marginally) in 2016.

In only a couple of years we learn the body (brain) has CBD receptiors not unlike opioid receptors. And those receptors are some of the most influential in the entire brain/body combo.

An entire, functioning system that we know nothing about. Nothing. Zip. Nada.

So when someone says they get this benefit or that benefit …. Remember how this all started. We pulled back a dumb ass prohibition..

We remain in the dark ages. Drug prohibition is insane in a modern society.

Who knows what drugs or combinations may be developed? Human knowledge cannot afford these anti- drug Crusaders – who remain intent on keeping us chained to 1200 AD.

It’s all about money. Can’t patent a natural molecule like CBD, THC or similar.

Ken31
Ken31
January 10, 2019 6:20 am

CBD is all that and a bag of chips. It is very effective with anxiety, general anxiety, PTSD, seizures, chronic pain, and a host of other issues. I gave it to a guy at a VA brain clinic. I never found out his story, but I knew the guy from being treated there for TBI. He was able to talk coherently with CBD. Something he was unable to do aside from gesticulating for the months I had known him.

Much research needs done on this miracle drug. I take it for PTSD/anxiety and it is the only thing that both works and has no side effects. Some prescription stuff I tried did nothing but scramble my brain.

P.S. I gave it to the old vet, because it was known to me he was already smoking marijuana with other vets, and it was known to be his favorite activity. He actually felt better from the CBD without getting high, though he loves getting high. I just take the CBD.

Hollywood Rob
Hollywood Rob
January 10, 2019 8:45 am

By in large a good post. There are a few errors, not the least of which was the addiction comment unless you want to conflate physical addiction with psychological addiction CBD in particular is not addicting. Neither is THC, but if you use it to help with anxiety then you will come to depend on it for reducing the anxiety. You will be anxious if you don’t use it. If you use THC to sleep, then you will become reliant on THC to sleep and you will not be able to sleep without it. But that is not Physical addiction.

In addition, there are many strains of weed out there. Some are very low in THC and some are Very Very Very high in THC. But they are all basically the same plant. Hemp is not a different plant, it is just a lower THC version of the old “Evil Weed”. CBD products are new to the market and it is very fair to say that the risks and benefits are not yet know, but can you name a single pharmaceutical that would not be the case for? Practically every ad on tv is for a drug that has horrible side effects. Every other ad is for 1800BADDRUG once the lawyers have figured out that those horrible side effects kill people. At least, you can say for sure that nobody has died or had their dick fall off for consuming pot.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hemp

So CBD comes from Cannabis. THC comes from cannabis. You can take it to see if it will work for your particular ailment. But you won’t know how much to take – that you will have to figure out for yourself. And how is that different from any of the other chemicals that we put into our mouths? How many donuts is it safe to consume?
How many aspirins?

Nobody but you can decide the answers to that question. It’s no different from any other drug. Your results may vary.

anon
anon
  Hollywood Rob
January 10, 2019 10:50 am

its actually QUITE different from “every other drug” when you factor in: side effects, contraindications, toxic-to-lethal dose levels..

get serious there at least…even ‘simple’ stuff like ibuprofen will rupture your stomach and liver if you overdo it.