The use of cannabis as a mood stabilizer in bipolar disorder: anecdotal
evidence and the need for clinical research
by
Grinspoon L, Bakalar JB
Department of Psychiatry,
Harvard Medical School,
Boston, Massachusetts
02115, USA.
mh235@columbia.edu
J Psychoactive Drugs 1998 Apr-Jun; 30(2):171-7
ABSTRACT
The authors present case histories indicating that a number of patients find
cannabis (marihuana) useful in the treatment of their bipolar disorder. Some
used it to treat mania, depression, or both. They stated that it was more
effective than conventional drugs, or helped relieve the side effects of those
drugs. One woman found that cannabis curbed her manic rages; she and her husband
have worked to make it legally available as a medicine. Others described the use
of cannabis as a supplement to lithium (allowing reduced consumption) or for
relief of lithium's side effects. Another case illustrates the fact that medical
cannabis users are in danger of arrest, especially when children are encouraged
to inform on parents by some drug prevention programs. An analogy is drawn
between the status of cannabis today and that of lithium in the early 1950s,
when its effect on mania had been discovered but there were no controlled
studies. In the case of cannabis, the law has made such studies almost
impossible, and the only available evidence is anecdotal. The potential for
cannabis as a treatment for bipolar disorder unfortunately can not be fully
explored in the present social circumstances.
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