new study in pullman shows munchies might help t 6

New Study in Pullman Shows ‘Munchies’ Might Help Those with Loss of Appetite

CED Clinical Relevance
#78 Strong Clinical Relevance
High-quality evidence with meaningful patient or clinical significance.
ResearchTHCCancerNeurology
Why This Matters
If you grow cannabis at home or buy from cultivators, this research on common weed killers and cancer risk highlights why clean, organic growing practices and rigorous testing matter for your safety.
Clinical Summary

NBC Right Now’s local coverage of the WSU/Calgary PNAS study conducted in the Pullman community. The trial recruited 82 volunteers ages 21-62 and used a whole-plant vapor approach rather than synthetic THC to better reflect real-world use. The appetite effect was universal and immediate, kicking in within 30 minutes. The rat component proved the mechanism is centrally mediatedโ€”blocking brain cannabinoid receptors stopped the effect while peripheral blocking did not. This translational approach combining human and rodent data provides the strongest evidence yet for developing cannabis-based appetite therapies for clinical wasting syndromes.

Dr. Caplan’s Take
“Every cannabis product is only as safe as the soil it came from,if we’re going to take consumer health seriously, comprehensive pesticide testing and organic cultivation standards are not optional.”
Clinical Perspective

FROM PULLMAN TO THE CLINIC

The 82 volunteers were Pullman community members ages 21-62. Whole-plant vapor was chosen over synthetic THC to mirror real use. The translational designโ€”parallel human and rodent experimentsโ€”is the gold standard for drug development cases.

Rats immediately resumed food-seeking upon cannabis exposure despite satiation. Brain receptor blocking stopped it; peripheral didn’t. This evidence base could support cannabis-derived appetite therapies for HIV/AIDS wasting, chemotherapy-induced anorexia, and cancer cachexia. Local science, global impact.

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