The Dr. Hyman Show - Advances In Therapeutic Uses Of Medical Marijuana with Dr. Mikhail Kogan
Episode Date: October 20, 2021This episode is sponsored by Even, BiOptimizers, and Athletic Greens There is a lot of noise around medicinal marijuana; so much so that just the thought of trying it might be overwhelming. There are ...actually many proven benefits when it’s used the right way, some of which I’ve experienced myself. When I was recovering from mold toxicity combined with C. diff and a slew of other factors that ruined my gut, I was so nauseous that I couldn't eat and was rapidly losing weight. None of the anti-nausea medications I tried were working, but marijuana did. Now, there are a lot of nuances to its use and much more research to be done. To understand what the data currently shows us on medicinal cannabis and where someone might start if they’re curious, I’m excited to sit down with an expert on the topic, Dr. Mikhail “Misha” Kogan. Dr. Kogan is the medical director of the George Washington University Center for Integrative Medicine, and Associate Professor of Medicine at the George Washington University School of Medicine. He has recommended medical marijuana to thousands of patients and is a frequent lecturer on medical cannabis to professional audiences across the nation. This episode is brought to you by Even, BiOptimizers, and Athletic Greens. Even provides personalized nutrition for medication users and right now, you can schedule a complimentary consult with an Even expert to figure out the right nutrient companion for you. Plus, you can get 20% off your first order with the code DRMARK20 here. You can try BiOptimizers Magnesium Breakthrough for 10% off by using the code HYMAN10 here. For a limited time, BiOptimizers is also giving away free bottles of their bestselling products P3OM and Masszymes with select purchases. Athletic Greens is offering 10 free travel packs of AG1 with your first purchase here. In this episode (audio version/Apple Subscriber version): My experience using marijuana therapeutically (6:27/2:25) Evidence-based research showing the benefits of medical marijuana (11:43/8:02) How medical marijuana works in the body (14:40/10:56) Using medical marijuana for pain, nausea, Multiple Sclerosis, and insomnia (23:06/19:26) Inconsistencies in regulation and access to cannabis (29:31/25:09) Using cannabis to treat skin issues as well as for digestive issues (34:47/28:44) Considerations for selecting the best type and administration route of cannabis products (46:01/41:04) Recommendations for treating sleep issues and insomnia (56:57/51:26) Cannabis and Covid-19 (1:01:45/56:14) Quality assurance of medical cannabis products (1:11:20/1:05:46) Get a copy of Dr. Kogan’s book, Medical Marijuana: Dr. Kogan's Evidence-Based Guide to the Health Benefits of Cannabis and CBD here. Mentioned in this episode: Leafly | Weedmaps | NORML
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
So I have the three mantras with cannabis.
Start low, go slow, and deliver it where it needs to go.
That third one, I think, is unfortunately not as commonly understood out there.
So if you have a lesion on the skin, put it there.
Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mark.
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And now let's get back to this week's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy. That's pharmacy with an F, a place for conversations that matter.
And if you're confused about this whole story of medical marijuana and the use of marijuana
as a therapeutic agent in healing and medicine, you got to listen up because we have an expert
today with us, my friend, Dr. Misha Kogan, who is my go-to guy in Washington, D.C. for
functional medicine. He is the medical director of George Washington University Center for Integrative Medicine.
He's associate professor of medicine at the George Washington University School of Medicine.
And I've known him for a long time, and I work closely with him with my patients.
And he is one of the most important thinkers and doctors in America focused on functional
medicine. And now he's turned his
wisdom and medical knowledge to the field of medical marijuana and has recommended it to
thousands of patients and lectures on this to professional audiences all around the country.
And now he's written a book, which is awesome. So we can actually learn what he knows because it is
a very confusing area. Medical marijuana,
Dr. Kogan's evidence-based guide to the health benefits of cannabis and CBD. You can go get it,
get it now. It's out. And I recommend highly if you're having any issues that we're going to talk
about on this podcast that you think might benefit, learn about it, learn how it can be
helpful. You know, we have, unfortunately in this country, had a backlash against various kinds
of substances, whether it's psilocybin or marijuana, because of their particular qualities
that I think the culture wasn't ready for in the 60s and 70s.
But now there's a sort of reawakening, and medical marijuana is legalized in most states.
Marijuana is legalized for recreational use in many states. Psil And medical marijuana is legalized in most states. Marijuana is legalized
for recreational use in many states. Psilocybin is now legalized. Oregon is decriminalized in
many other states. And I think we're going to see more and more research pushing forward these
therapeutic substances that come from nature, plant-based medicine. Okay. So welcome, Misha.
Thank you. Thank you. So exciting to be here, Mark.
All right. Well, you know, I want to pick your brain about this because I, you know, I have my personal experience with marijuana.
I want to share that at the beginning and how powerful it was.
Not like you're thinking. No, make fun of me, Misha.
No comments.
No, this is not what I'm talking.
Okay, forget that. Okay okay i had medical marijuana experience okay
i should have i should have properly phrased it
so i got sick a number of years ago from mold and uh you were helpful in getting me some things to
treat that and i really was so sick and i ended up getting getting a C. diff infection from an antibiotic that I took,
which caused colitis. And it also, I had a broken arm and I took a bunch of anti-inflammatory drugs
like Advil, got gastritis. And all of a sudden I went from my digestion working to not working. I had severe epigastric stomach pain. I was nauseous
24-7. I had bloody diarrhea 10 to 20 times a day and colitis developed. I was a mess.
And I had really smoked pot a few times in college, but I really wasn't a big pot fan.
I just felt it made me stupid. I like my brain, so I don't like feeling stupid. I'm like,
what was I saying? Huh? What? Okay. And a friend of mine, I was telling her I was having all these
problems. She said, why don't you try this? And she gave me this jar of weed that her nephew had
grown illegally with full of seeds. And I'm like, I'll try anything. So I,
I started to smoke and, and I did it every evening in order to eat. Cause otherwise I couldn't eat
and help me eat and help me sleep. Cause I was in pain and help with the nausea where nothing
else worked. I was trying Zofran, which is a chemo nausea drug. I was trying Ativan,
all these drugs for nausea, nothing worked. So it
was really a profound experience for me going, wait a minute, this is really a profound medication
or an herb, you know, that has not been properly integrated into healthcare. And so what I love
about your book, and I want to sort of get into it now with you, what I love about your book is that it is so clear. It's so driven by research. It's so detailed in its explanation
of all the different issues and concerns and methods and routes of treatment that it's kind
of a refreshing look at this field that I haven't seen. I've seen a lot of noise about it, but I
haven't really seen any clear medical authority like you talking about this. So, you know, it's been used for
thousands of years. It's not been legal for most of our lives. And I said, now it's being legalized.
So how do we begin to navigate, you know, the world of medical marijuana and integrating it
into healthcare? Right. Well, I think the timing is pretty good. We
had cannabis around, especially if you're on the West Coast, if you're in California,
access was there for quite longer than on East Coast in most of the states.
But I think you're right. I think there just hasn't been any really good, clear,
well-wrapped around package of knowledge that most people can quickly digest. And so I
think that was actually one of the key incentives for the book. I felt like I often was repeating
myself saying the same thing because nobody knows the basics. So I had to start from like
cannabis 101 for each patient. I said, okay, well, if I write about this, maybe they can just read
it. And so next time they come, it's a little less work to do, practical reason. No, but seriously, I think we're entering the
era where it's just going to be one of our common tools and pretty much for almost all the medicine.
I have no doubt that, by the way, it won't be an alternative plant medicine in, say, a decade.
It'll just be another tool in a standard allopathic model. I
mean, it's already, if you look around how it's getting integrated, it's way bigger than, you
know, any of our branches of integrative or holistic medicine. I mean, most of the pain
doctors are already aware of it. Most of them have some kind of a flow that they can get patients to get the cannabis.
Like I give you an example of my own pain clinic at GW. Five, six years ago, I told them, look,
you guys have to look into this. I'm happy to come give you a grand rounds and we can review this in
detail. And guess what? I mean, they're like, oh, no, no, no, no, no. We have everybody signed
contracts that they can't use any substance.
I'm like, that's not any substance.
That's controlling your pains.
No, no, no.
So and then, you know, as the evidence accumulated.
So I'm giving them run rounds in a couple of weeks as an example.
So I think there's a rapid uptick in acceptance.
What's interesting, there's still zero clarity on how you're going to teach the students about, right?
How are we going to carefully educate the public?
If you look around most of the information out there, it's actually not academic.
Majority of information that people are getting is from commercial sources.
And some of them are good.
You know, like Lifly is a, not that I'm trying to advocate for anything here, but, you know, there are lots
of good resources, but they're scattered. They're not academically supported or academically
backed. And, you know, and I think that's, that's not a change. And a lot of people are going to
listen to that. So what is the research base for medical marijuana?
I mean, it's being used clinically a lot.
It's used recreationally a lot.
Is there an evidence base?
You know, we talk about evidence-based medicine.
There is.
But is there good research looking at the benefits and the risks of medical marijuana?
Yeah.
I mean, I think the evidence is rapidly growing.
We still have a problem.
I'll start from the other end. We still have a problem. I'll start from the other end.
We still have a problem with the fact that, you know, it's still a controlled substance.
It's still a DA Schedule 1 substance.
So the research is limited.
You can't actually, it's really hard to get federal dollars to study this.
And although actually it has been changing, but still the clinical research is lacking.
But despite that, there's actually a lot of evidence.
So in 2017, I'm just going to speak to most independent evidence.
In 2017, National Academies of Sciences and Medicine came out with a really important report.
It was literally was called, you know, medical cannabis report on medical cannabis efficacy.
And they concluded, I mean mean they put a significant conclusion they said that the for chronic pain in adults medical cannabis gets
grade a recommendation wow if we look if we look at all of our meds that we have
um opioids they're not even grade b they They like grade C minus. Yeah. Really?
Yeah, for pain.
And, you know, like an Advil and Tannol, I think, get in grade B.
Here you have talent, and here you have cannabis with grade A recommendation.
That's incredible.
Well, it's incredible, but it didn't get too widely known. I mean, people in our own field, of course, everywhere I go, that's one of the key slides because nobody's going to argue with National Academies of Science's conclusion, right? You know, but since there's been a lot, even more data,
NIH actually routinely now holds workshops on cannabis and sort of allowing the clinicians
and researchers look at the most updated evidence. So there's definitely a rapid shift.
So you're saying there's NIH research on this now?
There's a lot of NIH research. Yeah. Most of it's still bench research or preclinical, but there is a lot more money going into that because there's been call some probably a year
ago or more, or probably more than that already. There have been multiple calls for proposals for
a basic understanding of endocannabinoid system.
And I think that's the part where, you know, for our clinical evidence-based medicine, right,
before you can study something clinically, you have to say, look, there is a clear knowledge
of understanding of mechanism of action, right? And we can arguably say, we know all this already,
but, you know, the science has to take its
own steps interesting so you know i want to get into some of the what the research shows around
the benefits but you know one of the interesting things that you touched on was um the endocannabinoid
system so for those listening there the reason medical marijuana works is it's tapping into a biological system that already exists in our bodies and brains.
And it's called the endocannabinoid system.
So can you talk just a little bit about that, Misha, and what it does, what it's for, and what the benefits of this system are to our health?
Right, right.
Well, I think that's actually critical we talk about this because that's the core understanding of how actual exogenous or
cannabis from plant works, right? And by the way, this system was named after cannabis, right?
So it's like the doctors discovered it in a way and they named it after the molecule that they
realized was working on it
which isn't like the only reason it's there that's right you actually have to sort of well let's talk
about that first and then we'll because i have one philosophical point that i i think you're
going to have a great take on this so so we all have just like we have an endorphin system so the
endogenous opiates we have this endogenous cannab, so the endogenous opiates, we have this endogenous
cannabinoid system.
It's actually a lot older and a lot more complicated and a lot more important compared
to endorphin system.
Why?
That's not necessarily clear, but it appears that it's just more rudimentary.
And historically, it appeared in our evolution first.
So it's one of the oldest regulatory systems in our body. We have literally,
so the tetrahydrocannabinoid, which everybody after recreationally, the THC, right? So we have
molecules in our body that are very similar. Anandamide is a good example. It's probably one
of the more common. It's not the only one. We have multiple similar molecules internally,
and we make them. Like we literally make our own cannabis constantly in our
body. And then there are a set of receptors. The more commonly known ones are CB1 and CB2.
So this, so you can think of them like, it's a gross analogy. It's not necessarily 100%
accurate, but it's a good one. Key and a lock. So your key is our endogenous cannabis molecules,
or let's say anandamide and the lock of the CB1 and CB2 receptors. So when you open the lock,
something occurs, like your door opens and then you have a cascade of effects.
So if you're open CB1 receptor, then you have some kind of likely neurologic impact. So say pain control or, you know, some anxiety, decreasing anxiety, better sleep, those kind of things.
If you open CB2 receptors, which are on the periphery, you can have immune upregulation.
So a stronger immune system.
You can have metabolic improvement, like, you know, your certain metabolic parameters can improve.
You can have your bones lay down more bones so that their bones are stronger so they're they're the low the
impact the list of impacts that occurs when this happens is so long we'll sit here and we'll have
a whole lecture bottom line it affects almost the entire system. Almost every cell in our body, except for one area,
has the CB1 or CB2 receptors. Here where the sort of the most crazy and amazing mystery comes in,
except for one area, and that's the brainstem. So it turns out in the brainstem, which controls
our breathing, there's not as many CB1 receptors. So no matter how much cannabis you take in,
your breathing is not going to get suppressed
compared to if you take a lot of opioids,
then we know what's going to happen.
So why that happens, nobody knows.
The second mystery, that's what I really want to touch on.
Think about this.
We co-evolved with a plant, which is a weed,
meaning it grows everywhere, right?
It's called weed. They call it a weed meaning it grows everywhere right it's weeds it's called the weed
right so how come we co-evolved on this earth together with a plant that allows us to have this
fascinating interaction with it and we sort of we're coming back to the the plant's been used
for thousands of years in fact it may be be the oldest documented medical tool we have on earth.
If you go back to some of the original Chinese medicine works, it's been listed there as one of the first Chinese medicine herbs.
And it's not discussed in a lot of circles.
It's kind of hard to appreciate, right? But it's there. It's there as one of the original herbs that they've
used. And, you know, and then over the centuries, it was used in different ways. And then it finally
kind of end up in more modern civilized civilization. But it almost feels like we're now re-disarming.
Yeah. But here's a question for you. So in the opioid system, we have receptors for
the opioids, like narcotics, right? Heroin, morphine. And it's because we have our own
system of pain control called endorphins that bind to those receptors.
Is there a similar set of molecules in the body that naturally occur?
It's almost our natural marijuana.
Right.
As the endorphins are our natural opiate.
So what are those molecules and what role do they play and how do they interact?
Well, I think for listeners, anandamide is probably the most important one to remember.
There are a long list of those.
Anandamide, right.
Yeah.
That's probably the, it's one of the most common.
It's one of the best understood.
What's interesting that in addition to this sort of endocannabinoid system through cannabis receptors,
and let's call them what they are, CB1, CB2.
There may be others too, by the way.
There are lots of other impacts. So the plant has other active molecules. Terpenes, I'm sure we'll
talk about this. It has flavonoids, and all of them also have some impact. In fact, there's a
lot of research now going into terpenes because it turns out that if you just isolate THC and you take it in, the effect is
going to be limited. If you combine that impact with what terpenes can do, suddenly you have
whole lot more complex interaction with the body. And that's where I think the gold of cannabis will
be. And that's why I'm not worried much about sort of pharma taking all of
it over because recreating some of these interactions, what we often call an antirash
effect, is very difficult. Yeah. I mean, that's the typical efforts of medicine, which is to find
something that works, to reduce it to the one molecule and to isolate it, reproduce it and
distribute it and market it and patent it.
And what you're saying is really important to underscore, which is that it's the complex interaction of all the plant molecules and phytochemicals in marijuana that make it work.
So if you just take any one of them out, it may be synergistic effects that you can't
reproduce by just isolating it as a single drug.
Right, right, right, right, right. The simple example is, so, you know, historically we had this sativa and indica strains.
We're trying to sort of walk away from this because it's actually more confusing than
anything.
Oh, really?
Yeah, well, because the, well, it's really based on terpene contents.
And since most of the modern strains are now hybrids, or many of them,
this separation of is it indica, is it sativa, is it two parts indica, one part sativa,
it just confuses everything.
So you're really going to, in the future, it's going to be,
you're going to look at the label and you're going to say,
okay, well, there's X amount of THC and there's this concentration,
and then there's these terpenes.
So you're going to have some kind of a key on a label that says you know it's a predominantly relaxing terpenes like say
linalool and it will allow you to say okay well that's probably good for sleep or for anxiety
because that's what it's going to help with so that's the future and that's how we're beginning
to think we're looking at okay this terpene is going to mix this way, and it's going to have this kind of total entourage effect, and that's what we're going to clinically use it for.
I think you just said a very important phrase, the entourage effect.
It's the entourage of all the molecules in the plant that has the benefit, not just an isolated component.
So let's get down into the details of this, because I shared my story about its effect
for me. But what are the most robust research findings on the therapeutic effects of cannabis?
Yeah. So I mean, definitely the pain I mentioned already. I think in terms of-
Pain you talked about.
Yeah. I think in terms of overall evidence, I think there's just most of it. And probably
second closest is nausea, especially
when nausea comes in settings of some kind of a cancer, whether it's a nausea from chemotherapy
or a nausea from cancer itself, doesn't matter. But that seems like there's really robust evidence.
And the third, I think, is multiple sclerosis related spasticity. So those are the three
original big ones that were in the National
Academies or NAS report. I think there's honestly underscoring and there's tons of evidence for
insomnia. I think it's just not really, we don't have like one large control study to say this,
but if you kind of look at collective amount of evidence and more importantly, what
we actually see in practice, we see that in my opinion, efficacy of cannabis for sleep
is way over 90%.
I mean, I don't have-
You know, it's true.
And it's way more effective than all the other sleep medications which are addictive.
It's so much more effective than all the meds.
You know, it's unbelievable.
And it's so much safer.
Like if you, well, you know me, I'm a geriatrician.
So half of my practice, people over 65 and, you know, insomnia in my practice used to be like one
of the hardest thing to deal with. Cause I know I don't want to write for any drugs for sleep.
And then cognitive behavioral therapy is not covered by insurance. If I send them for acupuncture,
it's also often not covered, even though it's a great tool. And so I didn't have my toolbox was sort of all non-pharmacological. I couldn't give anything
to people. And if I would give something, then like maybe trazodone, I was always like writing
the script with shaking hands. Am I doing more harm than benefit? So suddenly, you know, in 2011,
12, I started seeing what cannabis can do. And it was just, it's just turned my practice completely upside down in about two or three
years.
I just stopped talking about almost anything if the patient is really suffering.
I said, okay, we got to try cannabis first and we'll see what happens.
So are all your nursing home patients smoking pot and listening to Rachel Dead?
Well, I wish.
No, not quite yet yet that's a whole separate
you just opened the can of worms that if we go there it's not gonna come out of it well actually
it's it's interesting that it's shifting i i was you know i wasn't expecting that nursing homes
and assisted living facilities will sort of start actually opening up i thought it would be sort of
like forget it we're never going to talk about this.
No, actually, in the states where it's medically illegal, there's gradual shift.
There's gradual movement.
And some facilities actually vary.
Those who have a really open mind in medical directors.
A couple of years ago, American Directors Association, it's AMDA, A-M-D-A.
So they are the kind of docs who run nursing homes organization, they actually put out
extremely supportive comment. I, when I read it, I almost fell off the chair. It was one of the
most supportive comments saying, yeah, we have to assure that if in our state, cannabis is allowed,
that any interested patient will have some safe access, of course, considering the safety of
others in the facility.
That's the difficult part, you know, because, you know, A, if you're going to light up in the
nursing home, you know, the fire hazard, if you're not lighting up, what else? I mean, there's,
how do you store something which is schedule one? You know, well, I mean, it, it, it, unfortunately,
in a lot of situations, cannabis problems come only to two things,
the price and logistics and nothing else, and not the efficacy.
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Now, let's get back to this week's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
So, in terms of the efficacy, you know, a lot of people are
reluctant to use it in practice. A lot of misinformation. Can you share a little bit about
how people can learn about this in the right way and what the most important things you've
seen clinically from this are? There's sort of two separate questions in there.
Yeah. Well, I mean, I think outside of insomnia, to be honest with you, it's still not my first
choice for a lot of things. So I think I'm assuming that the patient who's coming to try it
or thinking about it trying sort of either exhausted other things or simply they just
feel like their symptoms not controlled enough by other things. So, I mean, I think,
well, first, the condition for which you're going to use it should be evidenced. You know,
there are lots of hype out there with CBD that it treats pretty much everything under the sun.
And I will actually tell you that in contrast to evidence for THC, evidence for CBD is dramatically
more limited. And maybe outside of anxiety and high doses for some
forms of insomnia there's not just that much evidence all of the evidence for CBD yeah so
yeah but but the evidence but if you look into you know I walked into Walmart to get something
or was it no Walgreens I walked into Walgreens a couple of
weeks ago to get something I'm walking along the lines to find and and there you have it CBD of
every kind Walgreens and it's their brand I know it's everywhere like you can buy it at the gas
station right right well you know what happens is simple certain things for which it tends to work
let's say you have one or two things let's say say you have a bruise. And so putting CBD on a bruise can actually ease it up.
Or there's a placebo effect. But next thing you know, now it's getting translated all over the
place. Anyway, so bottom line, you got to start with what's evidenced. Next, you have to figure
out logistics. Logistics sometimes where things bug down.
So let's say one of your listeners is not in a state where it's legal.
Well, that creates a significant challenge.
If you still want to try it, you're going to have to travel to a legal state and then
cross the lines, which is actually federal crime, to bring the cannabis from one state
to another.
A lot of people don't want to get involved because it feels like you're violating policies, even though, to be honest-
But there's medical marijuana that you can prescribe as a doctor, right?
Right. Well, but again, it's only for the residents of the given state. I mean, I can prescribe it
to anybody. Let's say the patient travels to my state and I feel appropriately to say,
you should be, but there's no way for me to recommend state and I feel appropriately to say you should be,
but there's no way for me to recommend it. If I try to recommend, they're not going to get it because they can't obtain the card. So in every state, it's not like if I write, let's say,
I don't know, oxycodone prescription, it goes straight to the pharmacy. Here, patient is
separated from physician completely. So you have to get a medical card,
which is always authorized by a state. So, you have to follow the state guidelines to get the
card. If you're not a resident, well, you're out of luck. You can't get it. So, then once you get
a card, then you have to identify dispensary and go there. And if your doctor tells you, okay,
get some, get this, this and that. Okay, great. But
most doctors don't tell you that they simply say, well, go and talk to the bartenders, we call them.
So go talk to them. It's like the lady in the vitamin store who's recommending your medical
care. Exactly. And you know, and some of those ladies are really good. They know a lot. And
they probably know more than some doctors. Well, not probably for sure. But some of them are
clueless. They're like high school students.
And so, not that I have one, but that's not the – no, point being is it's a dramatic – there's just no standardization across the field.
It's a maturing business.
I think in the future, it'll self-regulate better.
And I think there's already some states
there took really hard, like Connecticut and Maryland, for example, and others. So they took
really hard. They say, look, you've got to have some kind of an educational directory. In Connecticut,
you actually have to have a pharmacist on staff in every dispensary. So it's a pharmacist who's
going to sort of guide the products, guide the education of the dispensary. It sort of has to happen this way. If we're saying that this is medical, it has to look medical, right? And it shouldn't look like alcoholic beverages. Okay, so I'm going to say something and I hope somebody from district government is listening. So get a load of this. In District
of Columbia, where my main license is, I don't know who was the miracle worker who said, oh,
why won't we move cannabis into alcoholic beverages industry? So literally, when patient
applies for DC medical cannabis license, what they see is that this is Department of Alcoholic
Beverages, not a department of health
department of alcoholic beverages who in the right mind came up with this stupidity is just sort of
so you know and then you have so so you have you have some states that are thinking about this
right and you have some states where it's a mess yeah and how do we get to some kind of standardization? I don't know.
All I can say or all I can do is to say we got to teach our own colleagues first.
I think to me, it's so important topic.
So speaking of teaching our colleagues and figuring out how to educate people, let's
talk about what the top clinical indications, what are the top reasons you're going to use
it?
What are the conditions you treat?
And what are you seeing in your practice?
Right.
So we mentioned pain, nausea, insomnia, spasticity.
It doesn't have to be multiple sclerosis-related spasticity.
I think any spasticity.
Actually, quite often when a person has a sudden locked-in muscles, for example, let's say a neck, you can actually apply topicals.
Sometimes that's really
effective. All kinds of skin conditions. Lately, I find things like psoriasis, things like even
like literally herpes flares. You mean it helps reduce the skin lesions or just prevents the
symptoms? No, it actually treats underlying problems. And, you know, it's not, it's more complex than just THC, CBD.
We don't actually exactly know which molecule is more important,
but I often even use it for like a typical eczema in older age.
I often use it now as a first line, just to,
you can even start with just trying CBD creams.
Sometimes even those work.
So, you know, all kinds of skin conditions. I
actually think, well, the way I kind of- And you use it topically for the skin condition?
Topically, topically. And you use THC as well as CBD for the skin condition?
Yeah. So for psoriasis, I like to use mix. So I like to use more THC than CBD. For eczema,
I start with just CBD. And sometimes that's enough. Sometimes you have to add THC. I had a long
standing kind of a crack in the lip, which was from just cold sore from herpes. I had it for
about two decades and it would flare in the winter when I go skiing, especially when, you know,
lips get dry. And it took about three months, twice a day application of low concentration THC.
And now it's been what,
six, five, six years. I don't know, like the problem completely went away.
Amazing. Incredible.
So it has definitely THC as antiviral properties. So you literally can use it on a low grade
topical infections at almost no risk. If it doesn't work, you have time to try something else.
What else? Lots of different gastrointestinal
problems. IBS, you know, preferably irritable bowel syndrome. Yeah. Preferably in the form
where it goes down through swallowing form, in edible form. Shockingly, inflammatory bowel disease.
So, Crohn's and ulcerative colitis. You can use it orally,
but actually if the disease is mostly in the rectal area, you can use suppositories. It's a
very effective method. The data for that is mixed, but there's a lot of people who try. IBD
can be very persistent and very poorly controlled, even with new biologic drugs. And biologic drugs have
a lot of risks and side effects and high costs. So I had a good number of patients in whom IBD
has been controlled just using cannabis alone. It sounds crazy, but I think cancer is probably
one of the most controversial topics we can spend a whole hour talking about.
Yeah.
Well, let's talk about that for a minute because I've sort of been in this world,
and one of the things that I've heard people say is that it can be CBD and other concentration-specific forms,
specific plants can be effective in cancer.
Right.
Is there any data about that, or what do we know?
There's very little data.
I think we have kind of an early data. We have a
little bit of positive data in brain cancer. We have a lot of data in preclinicals. So if you take
a petri dish and you put the cancer cells on and then you put cannabinoids, literally almost all
cancers get killed off. Now, how does that translate into what's happening in our bodies is very hard to
figure out. I mean, unfortunately, cancer translation science generally is slow. But I
will tell you, those of us who use cannabis heavy in the practice, it's just the patients find us,
and often they will do things without our, you know, they'll just do things, right? And they'll
come in to check in with us. And I'll tell you, the most crazy cures I've seen in my practice,
they all have cannabis. Yeah, they all have cannabis. That wasn't the only thing the
patients were using. Don't get me wrong. It's always other. So was it just CBD or a combination?
It's, no, it has to be some THC. The ratios are not very clear. I tend to think that it's much more complex
than just THC and CBD. We do know that acidic forms, which are called CBDA and THCA, have
anti-cancer property. And then even some of the newer molecules that we're just beginning to
grow in our practice, like CBG, for example, cannabidiol with a G, like in Georgia.
So even molecule like that one
has some clear anti-cancer properties.
So nobody truly understands yet.
I know there are experts
with way more knowledge than me
who do this much more in their practice.
But I just don't think
that there's evidence enough
to sort of put that into mainstream.
It's happening whether we want it or not.
I think there has to be research and it's happening slowly.
I use it for almost all cancer patients, but not for cancer itself.
I simply use it because, well, think of it this way, right?
Most patients, they're going to have some cancer-related pain.
They're going to have some cancer-related nausea.
They may or may not
have anxiety and insomnia. But think about this. If I were to recommend the medications for this,
it's at least four pills. And here I have one product that can control it all. The dosing can
be precise. The route of administration can be variable and according to the patient's liking.
And guess what? You know what the side effect is, right? Somewhat slightly getting high. So in literature, it's a side effect. I'm yet to see
any cancer patients tell me, yeah, I really sort of, it's a bad side effect. You know, it's not.
I mean, people who overdose occasionally, it happens all the time, by the way, when you forget
to mix the bottle or you just take a little too much.
It's not like it's going to kill you.
It may be very unpleasant and people can't function.
But once they get a hold of the understanding what happened,
and this never happens again, it often turns out into funny stories.
I have plenty of those.
One of my favorite ones, I get a call from our emergency room attending saying,
Dr. Kogan, one of your favorite patients claims she's a call from our emergency room attending saying, Dr. Kogan,
one of your favorite patients claims she's dead and she wants to talk to you. And I'm like,
if she's dead, how can she talk to me? She's like, well, I'm telling you to talk to her. She's dead.
So yeah, I was using a bottle very appropriately, but it went on vacation. The bottle was standing,
things drifted to the bottom in the oil. So she didn't mix it very well. Took the same dose, but from the bottom got overdosed.
So it's really a safe drug, though, as you're saying.
What are the risks and the side effects?
It's extremely safe. Are there any downsides?
Because you know we're reading about kids who use regular pot,
have cognitive function, ADD, and behavioral issues.
Is there any merit to that?
You know, the old kind of potheads who would sit around and do nothing
and just goof off. Well, I mean, nothing has no side effects,
even cucumbers, as we say in Russia, right? I mean, you can die from anything if you use it
the wrong way. Long story short, I mean, there's tons of side effects. I mean, you have to really
understand the medicine of it pretty well to know some of them. Heavy, heavy use of THC in youth is a bad news
because the brain doesn't mature right.
We know that.
There's a long list of data that's conclusive
that says if the teenager starts heavily using cannabis,
the outcome is probably going to be quite not good.
Much higher risk of schizophrenia, higher risk
of accidents, higher risk of the brain being sort of, you know, as you said, we think of it as a
but actually the way the brain on chronic cannabis looks, it's very specific. It's sort of like this
downing impact suppression of lots of normal cognitive function, which leads to this sort of appearance
of pothead. So, I mean, heavy users. Now, interestingly, all of that, this critical
point, all of that comes from THC. What happens when you start putting a lot of CBD in the mix,
let's say you're using only one-to-one THC of CBD ratio, most of us think that all the
side effects go away.
So part of the recreational future, I think, is going to be if you use products that have some CBD, is that going to nullify some of this long-term negative brain THC impact?
But Misha, kids who smoke pot are smoking pot.
They're smoking the whole plant.
They're not having isolated THC. So they're getting CBD.
Well, most of the recreational products are still almost pure THC.
And the reason is simple.
The CBD in a certain, the more CBD there is, the more different the high is going to be.
In fact, often there will be no high.
If you have certain ratio that's way towards CBD, let's say 20 to 1, you may have very little high or no high.
You may still have high if there's a high dose enough of THC. So the question is, should we
gradually transition entire recreational industry to have CBD? You know, that's a
hard philosophical question. Good luck transitioning anything that makes a lot of money,
right? But that's a very, in my mind, that's the main long-term concern is this kind of a heavy use of thc non-medically recreationally in terms
of side effects and we've seen these kids having other issues like personality disorders or bipolar
disease or depression yeah yeah i was just reviewing article uh from JAMA that came in June this year that basically shows any use of regular use of cannabis dramatically increased suicidality by like 40% and suicidal ideation.
And they looked at the whole data.
But if you carefully go back and you look how they looked at this, it appears very simple that we just have a rapid increase
in suicidality in all of the population of the United States. And that predates the COVID,
by the way. So it's like till between 2008, 2019. So the suicidality and depression is on the rise.
So a lot of people try to self-medicate. In fact, I often see products that are too strong,
and you can have a very beneficial impact with much lower doses,
with much less side effects.
So it's a problem of lack of education,
and it's also a problem of lack of ease of access to the medical products.
Instead, people turn often to recreational without good good managed advices or good
recommendations and partially you know i hope they read my book and yeah of course well it was
so comprehensive misha and you know you address some things that are very confusing for people
i mean you talk about the science behind it, you talk about the sort of social and political aspects, you talk about the medical benefits of it.
But you also talk about, you know, sort of the landscape out there now. And I remember when,
you know, when I was in college, it was like, you get Maui Waui or Sensameon or whatever,
like where it came from. And that was like your brand. And now you go into one of these,
you know, legalized marijuana stores, and it's overwhelming.
It's like picking wine.
You know, like where does it come from and what is it?
Right, right.
Do you want to inhale?
Is it edible?
Is it topical?
Is it a vapor?
Like, do you want to pre-roll?
Like, do you want to stick it up your butt?
And what's the ratio of this and that?
Does it make you sleepy?
Or is it indica or CBD?
Or is it sleepy or happy or party?
I mean, it's overwhelming.
And I think, I mean, I'm no novice here, but I definitely find it overwhelming.
And I wonder how you guide people into which delivery mode you should use and which is the best for which thing.
Right.
And, you know know that's that's
overwhelming for you think of some of my patients who are over 75 or 85 or 95 and they've never
tried it or they tried it 30 years ago and have no recollection so you know i usually start most
of the patients with a sublingual full extract what we call fico full extra cannabis oils
they tend to be most easy
to control. You can start with just a couple of drops under the tongue. Absorption bypasses the
liver, so you don't have the problem of hyperactivation of THC that edibles can give a
lot of people, if they're not experienced, very strong high for a very long time. And that can be
very unpleasant and can just can basically kind of
psychologically prevent from trying something again.
So I almost always start either from with topical rectal or with sublingual
sublingual is by far most common.
Topical oral,
topical oral,
topical sublingual or rectal.
So I often,
if the patient comes in with something pelvic, like a pelvic pain, you know, like ulcerative colitis, we very often would try suppositories straight up.
Because cannabis systemic absorption of rectal is sort of always been in question. And I do think there is some, but it's just not as much as with oral and sublingual. But
if you have a localized problem, that's, so I have the three mantras with cannabis, start low,
go slow and deliver it where it needs to go. That third one, I think is unfortunately,
not as commonly understood out there. So if you have a lesion on the skin, put it there.
You know, if you have a lesion in the pelvic area, okay, well, so you can
put it vaginally or you can put it rectally. But what if you have like anxiety or nausea or pain?
Right. So anxiety, nausea, pain, that sounds more like neurological issue, right? So well,
put it under the tongue, right? Put it under the tongue. Vaping or smoking, a lot of people do.
I'm not opposing to them, but those tend to have a lot more side effects.
We didn't kind of actually discuss that, right?
Yeah, I want to talk about that.
So vaping, smoking, taking in the smoke, high temperature,
you're probably going to have at least some damaging lung impacts,
even if the evidence is not necessarily clear that you're going to –
well, there's no evidence that you'll cause lung cancer,
no matter how heavy you smoke cannabis. But, you know, you can cause chronic cough.
Does it cause the same kind of problems as smoking, vaping, tobacco? In other words,
does it cause pneumonitis and so forth?
To much, much lesser degree. It definitely can cause chronic cough and bronchitis,
but it doesn't seem to cause kind of lung cancer or you know say like interstitial pneumonia we
although right we had this scare right at the onset of covet when we had people who were using
black market cannabis they had this sudden bad lung disease and a lot of people not some people
died young people so this has nothing to do with cannabis. EVALI, it's called, I forget what it stands for.
It's basically a lung inhalation injury from probably vitamin E acetate,
which is a preservant in the illegal cartridges.
So we don't know for sure about inhale and what it does to the lungs like we do for vaping, right?
Well, it doesn't matter actually whether you vape or smoke both generally can come at the high temperature although there
are vapes now that have much lower temperatures so those are better we used to use bongs for
remember right well a volcano has been around forever right it's like like a complex vaporizer that can precisely control the temperature.
That's actually often used in research because it's so precise.
Volcano has been one of the most common vaporizers in research.
So, I mean, the funny thing is that most of the prior use, recreational use, is coming from inhaled route.
So, a lot of the research simply coming
from that area because you just have a lot more people doing it this way yeah but i think the
future of cannabis is really not an inhaled products i think the future is in in sublingual
oral capsules topical rectal people will keep using inhaled smoking whole flour vaping there's
nothing wrong with that and you know i just especially in my practice where a lot of people over 65 i have a hard problem hard time
initiating somebody on inhaled product if i know that it's going to cause cough and especially if
they already have some lung disease like asthma it's not it's not necessarily first but for
certain things it's gut scent let's say you have a severe nausea and you really can't put anything in the mouth like what else you're going to do well that's what happened to
me i couldn't eat i was throwing up all the time yeah um now um in terms of the the the forms and
the types i mean how do people know what to pick i mean not everybody has a doctor that's informed
like you that's right and so how do you know when you go in? You can maybe look at the route of administration, but there's all these different varieties.
They're like, they're just, it's overwhelming.
It's like flavors of bubble gum, you know?
Right.
Well, so I think you have to learn a little bit first, like before you go to the dispensary.
Tell us what would be the take-homes for people.
Like what are the things that people should know before they walk into the dispensary?
Right. I think the first take-home should be know what condition are you going to use it for and get a basic sense for that condition.
What are the experts would recommend?
So if you get my book and you look up your condition in my book, you can see what I would recommend.
There's tons of other great books.
It's not the only one and lots of experts in some ways.
There are lots of experts who actually know a lot more than me.
Yeah.
But start at least from some basics because otherwise if you go and you rely just on butt tender, it's probably not the smartest thing.
I hope in the future, in 10 years, I can say, oh, no, just go and there's going to be an educator in the dispenser who is going to tell you exactly what you need. And there are some dispensers that are starting to do that. So
sometimes if I'm totally strapped for time, and I know a few dispensers in my area that do that
well, I would send the patient there. Unfortunately, even with those situations, often we have issues
because, you know, you'd have a sensitive patient and they will just start so much higher.
So, but then after you get some core basics and you started trying, you have to be persistent.
Often just starting with one product is not going to work very well.
You have to try two or three until you find your own personal kind of, and not only one product.
Often people need between two to three.
That's two, three products. And why would you need two, three products?
Well, let's talk about pain for a second. That's an easy example. Let's say you have some kind of
a chronic pain, let's say fibromyalgia. If you get a product that's more, that has terpenes that are
more activating, and you take that past five o'clock at night, you're going to stay up till midnight or past. So you don't want to do that. You want to take
that early in the day. But the opposite is true too. If you take a calming, more sedating
strain in the morning, you're not going to be able to function very well if you're sleepy all day.
So here's a simple example. If your pain needs to be controlled more than with once a day, which often the case, you
want to take something activating in the morning, something sedating at night.
That's one simple, simple statement.
But often you also can use different routes of administration.
For example, edibles can be great if you wake up late at night, late in the morning and
can't sleep.
Let's say your insomnia goes at 3 a.m.
You just wake up and then you're up and you can't go back to sleep.
The edibles will work great.
But if you have both…
They won't make you too sleepy?
Well, you have to dose appropriately, right?
You have to titrate to dosing.
So that's the principle, start low, go slow.
You'll start with a very low dose,
and I usually start with sublingual form. So there's this idea of therapeutic widening of
the window. So if you start sub-therapeutically for a couple of days, three to five days,
and then you start increasing, you're running much, much lower risk of side effects. If you start and you very quickly
titrate up, let's say each next dose adds 20, 30%, which is commonly done for pain,
you may actually end up overdosing quickly. And be groggy in the morning.
And be groggy in the morning. But if you do this carefully and you get to a point where it's
working, so you could actually use sublingual right at bedtime or a few minutes before because it will kick in quick. And then you can also take
an edible that will kick in a lot later. So some people can do that. Often it's not even needed.
You can just take the oral a little bit earlier, but it takes time to figure all these combinations
and you need to either have a very knowledgeable provider
who will be sort of like an advisor and say, look, okay, well, this is what happened. This is why it
didn't work or this is why it had side effect. Or you have to try it on your own if you have no
access. So the book is written both to help people who are complete novices, but also people who've
already tried something because it outlines some of those pitfalls, sort of what happens if you overdose and you're afraid of going back to it.
How are you going to do that? Um, you know, and that's, uh, that's why still a lot of people
take inhaled because the predictability of the effect is better. You know, you, you, you take
a drug and you know how it's going to make you feel,
especially if you found the strain that works for you. I have nothing against that. It's just
often for medical reasoning, that may not be the best approach. But often I don't, if the patient
comes to me and says, look, I've been smoking my whole life. This is what I do. This is how it
works for my pain. I often don't say anything because I find it not often easy to transition a person from a smokable product to something else.
I would tell them what I think and then give it up to them to say if they want to try.
I had a number of people who switched over the years.
What would be the best sleep recommendations?
A lot of people have insomnia.
70 million people have sleep disorders in this country and sleep issues.
It's a lot of people. I'm just wondering what's 70 million people with sleep disorders in this country and sleep issues. It's a lot of people.
I'm just wondering what your starting recommendations are for people and where they could kind of begin to think about using it.
Right.
So find a product.
Find a sublingual product like an oil, a drops, or what we call FICO, full extra cannabis oil.
I don't like alcohol because alcohol can burn the mouth.
There are some tinctures that are alcohol-based.
I tend to like oils more, whether it's olive oil or MCT oil.
So find a product oil like that.
A lot of the products that are specifically designed for sleep,
they're going to have a couple of simple features.
The Indica is, again, outdated, but that's the kind of original term.
So you're looking for Indica products, right?
But now that we're going away from it,
you can look for a couple other things. You can look for this molecule called CBN. C-B-N as Nancy.
Instead of CBD. So products that have high CBN in mix with THC sometimes are really effective.
And often the products would have the terpenes that are coming, inhibiting, like linolel is one, but there are others.
And the products would often say that on a label, like a sleep or tranquility or whatever.
And frankly, those products often design specifically for sleep.
The good news is that a lot of the times, butt tenders would know that.
So if you come into the... They would know that, yeah. And even though there are a lot of edibles for sleep too, you know, there are edibles specifically designed to have the same sedating impact. the next morning grogginess. You don't know your particular THC need. It's actually very
interesting. The THC need for insomnia varies quite a bit. I would say somewhere between three
milligrams is probably the lowest, all the way to maybe 10, 15, 20 milligrams. And most people fall
somewhere between five to 10 milligrams, what I've been seeing. But again, my population on average is a little older
and sicker and more frail and more sensitive. So I may be seeing a bit of a lower spectrum in my
clinic. So I understand there are probably people who work with other groups of patients where the
dosing may need to be higher. So for pain, for pain, which... Start with sublingual for sleep.
Start with sublingual. Maybe an edible. Maybe an edible. And it takes about an hour to be higher. So for pain, for pain, which... Start with sublingual for sleep. Start with sublingual.
Maybe an edible.
Maybe an edible.
And it takes about an hour to set in?
Edible will take at least an hour, maybe a little bit less.
Sublingual can take 20, 30 minutes.
Sublingual tend to work a little bit faster.
You know, so plan accordingly.
If you need to fall asleep at 11 and you take it right at 11, you may with either form stay up for a little bit longer than you want. So you may want to time it a little bit ahead of time. Again, that's why people like smokable, right? Because it hits right in and there's no lag time.
Yeah, you're very quick. Right. And again, as I said, in the literature out there, I often speak about
non-inhaled forms simply because they're safer, but it doesn't mean that if you have a problem
that you feel needs to be addressed urgently, I think some amount of inhaled products is totally
fine if it's limited and done in a smart way and again yeah so the lower temperature
of inhale product the better so the the vape if you get a quality vape is probably safer than
than burning a flower if you can vape the flower now there's devices that are literally like i'm
not kidding iphone controlled or computer control where, where we can pick precise temperature and the dosing.
So that's the next generation.
Yeah, there's some devices where you can tell the vape,
you want to take 10 milligrams.
And if you know the cartridge concentration,
it will calculate it precisely.
So when you inhale, it will dose it right for that dose.
So that's a future. It's
already here, actually. It's not even a future. Is it commercially available?
Yeah. Yeah, they're commercially available. You can buy them. The one system that I'm aware of
called Pax, P-A-X, they are doing that already. Of course, it's not cheap, you can imagine. So,
you know, it's not a typical pen vape can be $10, $20. Those things can be hundreds of dollars, if not more.
So they're not cheap.
And they're controlled by your iPhone.
They can be controlled by your phone.
Well, most of the time it is phone because it's most convenient
because you want to set up a certain parameters on the device
to be precisely, precise at delivery.
Amazing.
Now, there's been some noise about COVID and cannabis, especially for long haulers.
What do we know?
What do we not know?
I mean, it can't be that there's that much research right now.
So the big noise was, I think, about a year ago when somebody, and there was a researcher in Canada that made a splash saying that cannabinoids could be used as anti-COVID.
I honestly think that was just a hype.
I looked at that study.
It was very, very preclinical.
And, you know, we know that THC has a very potent antiviral effect.
So there's nothing surprising there.
But translating that to the human, I think it went from it was a preclinical study to the Facebook saying cannabis cures COVID everywhere.
And I was like, oh my God.
You know, now it's fascinating you brought up long COVID.
I actually feel strongly that in the last year, I feel like a third, if not half of everything I do is gearing that direction simply because we have an influx of patients.
And there, cannabis can be a godsend for a lot of symptoms.
A lot of people still have horrendous insomnia.
And fascinatingly, they have really bad cognitive problems like the attention lock, brain fog.
Actually, I have seen some patients do really well with a very low doses of THC and CBD.
I don't necessarily going to use it on everybody. It's sort of, it's still evolving as to who should we pick for that.
A lot of people have, they lose a lot of weight and then they have this kind of general
fatigability and they're not eating well and they don't have an appetite. Definitely cannabis can
be occasionally helpful
for that. I would say there's actually, I didn't mention that as one of the most evidence-based
approach. Everybody knows that you smoke and next thing you know, you really want to eat.
Turns out the evidence for that is very mixed. It's not as clear as you would think. There are
definitely people who benefit from it. When you look at the studies, the studies have never been conclusive in contrast to pain or things like nausea. So I
still use it. I think that newer molecules like CBG, for example, have tremendous promise for
that. But again, we need a lot more data to be conclusive, but definitely can use it. So it can be a very supportive
additional tool for everything we do. But of course, you know, more than anybody that
a lot of these patients with long COVID, they have chronic inflammatory response,
they have a mitochondrial suppression and kind of just general low energy states where,
you know, you really
want to boost the cellular function first. I don't necessarily think of cannabis being their
first line. In fact, I'd be cautious if somebody's going to start smoking for some of the relief of
their symptoms, actually energy can be drained. It's true. I mean, we've done a bunch of podcasts
on long COVID and I think it's, you I think there's more to learn for sure.
Exactly.
For those that are listening and want to know about what to do about that, which now seems to be between 10% and 30% of people who get COVID, which has been millions and millions.
And now it seems like the Delta is also going to give us long-term post-COVID kids at somewhere between 5% to 10% of kids.
Yeah, I mean, I think people are worried about COVID,
but I'm more worried about long-haul COVID
because most people don't die when they get COVID.
But you think of 30% of 200 million people,
we're talking 60 million people.
We have more than 1,000 patients at GW on the wait list
in just one clinic, just on wait list
because we can't get them in quick enough.
It's a complex process. Yeah, I think it's really a problem. But from a functional medicine perspective,
it's a lot people can do. And I think, you know, symptom management through medical marijuana can
be part of it, but it's not really the only thing. Exactly. So, Misha, when people are listening to
this, they're like, okay, well, I've got some of these conditions. I have sleep issues, I have
pain, I have digestive problems, I have MS. I have whatever it is that we've been
talking about. How do they go about finding a good dispensary, a doctor who can guide them?
Where do people start? It's a little overwhelming. It is overwhelming. So there are some really good
online resources. I think Leafly is one.
Weedmaps is another.
So a lot of these websites will have a list of practitioners in the area.
If you're in a state where it's legal. Can you give the websites for both of those?
Sure.
Leafly.
Oh, spelling.
You ask a Russian guy to spell something.
I have to look it up.
I think it's L-E-A-F-L-Y.
Yeah, I think that's right.
And it is an app also. I'll put it in the show notes
too. Yeah. L-E-A-F-L-Y. That one. Most of the states would have a list of the doctors who are
formally authorized to recommend. So if you're in a state where it's legal, the first step, go to the actual state
website that's responsible for medical cannabis, and there will be a website. And it'll explain
to you typically the process of how to do it. If you can't figure it out, there are websites,
other websites that will help you. Like I really like one called Normal, N-O-R-M-L.
Okay, I got to spell that too.
Interestingly, most of my spelling efficacy is when I type things because I remember what my hands are doing.
N-O-R-M-L.
So it's a national organization for the reform of marijuana laws.
So they have a list for each state how you apply.
Like what is the process?
What are the pitfalls?
Because you got to get a card first.
So once you get a card, hopefully you have a way to access who are the physicians because to get a card, you have to get a medical recommendation.
So you went to a physician or a healthcare practitioner who is approved for this state like nurse nurse practitioner, naturopathic doctor, etc.
So hopefully they're knowledgeable.
Now, what if they're not knowledgeable?
Well, then your next level is either you're going to find someone who actually understands something,
and it doesn't have to be a doctor.
There's a lot of people who call themselves now canna coaches.
Some of them are great. In fact, in the beginning, 10 years ago,
one of my sort of most informative colleagues was one such person.
I mean, basically Beth self-learned the topic
because she was basically almost dead from all kinds of medical problems.
She was taking 30 pills.
Her bills were in thousands of dollars a month.
And she said, screw all this, went to Colorado, learned all this stuff,
got herself old of all the pills and said, look, I got it.
So some people there have just, you know, through their life knowledge,
they became so interested in engaged and that becomes their whole world.
So people like that end up usually being the masters, I would say.
And if you can find one of those, great.
If you can't, you're going to have to rely
on your butt tender. So then the road can be split. If you get a good one, you're in luck.
You may hit a jackpot right away and you'll be fine and it will work. And if it's not,
then something happens. You have to kind of go back and again, look for a provider or a source
of information that's going to work.
So I know it's not a satisfactory answer, but the reason is we have to teach our colleagues.
So I kind of, the way I took it on myself, you know, I'm not a researcher.
There are experts in this field who are way deeper than me, but I'm in university, right?
I'm a full-time faculty. So we said, look,
we got to do something. And instead of creating yet another attempt at forming academic program,
that's very expensive. We said, look, we got to establish some kind of a cohesive process where
we will create a consent of competencies. So the way medical education happens this way,
you have to prove to the larger administrative body of medicine education, medical education, that this topic has a set of competencies that can be followed as a standard.
If you have a couple of schools here and there and few students can learn, that's fine.
But the next step really have to be every medical student coming out
of medical schools must know this topic. And that they're not just need to know, oh, they're potheads
and they're none. And there's some, a little bit of evidence. No, they have to know how to recommend
it. They have to know basics of laws in states where they practice. They have to understand
basic clinical application, basics of toxicity and how to actually practically recommend it.
And if we create a set of competencies and then try to go to American College of Graduate Medical Education and say, look, you've got to approve this, then that's the next step.
So that's actually what we're doing.
We got a grant from industry to organize this.
So we already started a process.
It'll probably take some months to get this,
but we're hopeful that we'll go and try to publish this in a decent journal
and then try to push this.
But it has to start something like that.
We have to start pushing the future of cannabis to be away from the industry or not away from industry,
you can't do it, but also towards more academia and more standardization. Otherwise, we're going
to, industry is going to standardize it, not necessarily the way we want to see it.
Yeah. I mean, I think you have a very good point there, Misha, because people are using it
recreationally. They're using it for mild symptoms, you, you know, get a Tylenol all over the counter or something like
that. But there are more focused medical indications and there are more and more going to
be discovered as we're doing the research and as you found patients with psoriasis or MS or things
you wouldn't necessarily think about. And so, you know, as a physician, I like to know what I'm
doing. I like to know the dose. I like to know the source. I like to know what's coming. I like
the standardization. I mean, whether it's a, whether it's a drug or a
supplement, I'm very, very picky about what supplements I recommend because I want to make
sure that the raw ingredients were sourced from the right place. I'm not sure I want them coming
from China. If they come in, I want the herbs to be tested. I want the purity, the potency,
the active ingredients, the concentrations, the bioavailability, I'm sort of obsessive about it.
And in the same way, I feel like, you know, with medical marijuana, you don't know what you're getting.
Like you got, it's like, it's kind of a free for all.
It's not medicalized.
So it's, and I'm not saying they should be only medical, but that there should be a medical, like just there are professional grade brands of supplements.
Well, let's talk about this a little bit. I think that's actually a critical point. Like just there are professional grade brands of supplements or you can buy the coffee slip at Costco.
I think that's actually a critical point.
And it's one of the passing the level of initial knowledge.
So going away from who knows what to a point, you know, how do you assure quality here?
That's probably the second most important problem right now. It's lesser, believe it or not, shockingly,
it's much lesser of a problem in medical cannabis area
compared to the CBD and the hemp.
Because there, there's zero control.
So unless it's a trusted company, you have no clue what is happening.
Just what I mentioned is,
are you going to trust your Walgreens to produce quality CBD?
I don't know.
I'm not saying anything, but I probably wouldn't, right?
So I would have my own list of brands that I would trust that I would go to.
With medical cannabis, each state that passed the law is required to regulate it.
And most of the states actually did a reasonable job to say okay we're gonna control the production we're
gonna assure there's some kind of attempt at quality assessment and and quality measures so
if you're getting medical cannabis you can be assured you're probably getting nothing from
china it's from us it's locally grown that's actually a legal requirement because of the
state to i mean is it organic are you sure to worry about pesticides? Right. So you have to still worry about certain things, but you have to worry less compared to
what's going on with hemp. The other problem with CBD and hemp is, think of it this way,
in order to get CBD and concentrated amount from hemp, you're going to have to grow way more plants
than cannabis. And so you, God forbid, you have a mold in there. You brought up this mold problem.
You're going to concentrate that toxin down.
And we already have seen issues where there was a serious illness
with people consuming mold at cannabinoid products,
whether it's a hemp or cannabis.
So you really don't want to hyper-concentrate extracts
if there's any possible toxin, right?
Because you're going to concentrate the toxin. And then we already have seen, we actually, there's any possible toxin, right? Because you're going to concentrate the toxin and then we already have seen
we actually, there's a belief there's
been some deaths related to
malt or other
toxins in the concentrated product.
So definitely I think
there has to be more regulatory mechanisms
in the future. I think
when the whole nation moves away
from, you know, this
mix of mishmash of states to de-uling or rescheduling cannabis, we're going to have some kind of national process.
And I'm very hopeful.
I think if you look at most of the decent industry partners, they're doing their best.
I mean, a lot of the times it's hydroponically grown.
So hydroponically, definitely, generally speaking,
will probably be safer contaminant wise. We talked about the cannabis is weed, right? I mean,
there's a reason why we're calling it. It grows really quickly. It's a very robust plant.
It mutates quickly. If you have a right conditions, it's relatively easy to cultivate it. And I mean,
it is an art. I mean, the cultivation of cannabis is a profound art,, it's relatively easy to cultivate it. And I mean, it is an art.
I mean, the cultivation of cannabis is a profound art, but it's a lot easier than some other plants.
And it's a lot easier than a lot of most of the, I would say medicinal plants. So I think
because of that, making the future of, you know, boutique cultivation or quality cultivation,
forget just boutique, I think is quite bright. And I feel strongly we're going to have some maturation of the industry where bed partners
over time are just going to evaporate and we're going to be left with some reasonable
quality that everybody can have access to.
So Misha, as we wrap up, I wonder if you have any parting thoughts about what you'd like
to share with the audience about your take-homes around medical marijuana. I think there are two
big take-homes. So one is I see cannabis as this amazing example of integration of plant medicine
into our health. It's sort of like rediscovering. We've had it for thousands of years. We forgot about it. We made it illegal for whatever. And then now it's kind of coming back
roaring because we're realizing the potential here. So I think following this field is important,
but I also want to say critical. It's not the only tool. It just needs to be effectively
integrated and used correctly in the mix of everything else we tool. It just needs to be effectively integrated and used correctly
in the mix of everything else we do. It's sort of a great example of why integrative medicine
and functional medicine is the future, because we have so many other tools. And when you learn how
to effectively use them, that's where the magic occurs. So don't get overhyped. Don't think that CBD or THC is going to cure everything under the
sun. Go into the resources that are balanced and deliver the knowledge in an evidence-based
approach with some kind of neutrality in it so there's not a lot of commercial
interest. Unfortunately, again, most of the data or information out there is coming from commercial sources because trying to make more money.
And I think that will change.
It will change.
So future is bright.
Use responsibly.
Find the way to understand it.
And you have to do it yourself.
You can't just rely on some doctor tell you what you're going to take.
You have to learn the basics here, at least for now.
Well, thank you for spending the time doing the homework, the hard work that summarizes what we need to know in your book, Medical Marijuana, Dr. Kogan's Evidence-Based Guide to Health Benefits of Cannabis and CBD. It is the book, as far as I'm concerned, about medical marijuana and
everybody who's interested in using it, who's tried it, who wants to learn more about it,
who's figured out that maybe they would benefit from it should definitely get a copy because it's
the most coherent, straightforward, and clear, both academic and also layperson guide to medical
marijuana. And I learned so much. I thought I
knew a fair bit, but I was basically just scratching the surface. So for those of you
listening and love this podcast, please share with your friends and family on social media,
leave a comment. We'd love to hear from you. How has it benefited you to use medical marijuana?
Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and we'll see you next week on The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Hey everybody, it's Dr. Hyman. Thanks for tuning into The Doctor's Pharmacy. I hope you're loving this podcast. It's one of my favorite things to do and introducing you all the experts that I know
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Just a reminder that this podcast is for educational purposes only.
This podcast is not a substitute
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or other qualified medical professional.
This podcast is provided on the understanding
that it does not constitute medical
or other professional advice or services.
If you're looking for help in your journey,
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If you're looking for a functional medicine practitioner, you can visit ifm.org and search their find a practitioner database. It's important that you have someone in your corner who's trained,
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