#72 Notable Clinical Interest
Emerging findings or policy developments worth monitoring closely.
If you use cannabis regularly and experience recurring nausea, vomiting, or abdominal pain that temporarily improves with hot showers, you should talk to your cannabis clinician about adjusting your dose, frequency, or product potency before your next ER visit.
Cannabis hyperemesis syndrome (CHS) is a real clinical condition characterized by cyclical vomiting, nausea, and abdominal pain in frequent cannabis users, and emergency departments across legalized states are reporting increased presentations. While CHS can be distressing and even dangerous if dehydration becomes severe, it is almost always associated with very high-frequency, high-potency use and resolves reliably with cessation or significant dose reduction. Clinicians and patients alike should understand that CHS is preventable and manageable, and its rising prevalence likely reflects both increased cannabis use and improved diagnostic recognition rather than a new or mysterious phenomenon.
“CHS is not a reason to fear cannabis, it is a reason to respect dosing, and every single case I have seen in my practice resolved when we got the patient’s frequency and potency under control.”
🔹 Cannabis hyperemesis syndrome is real, it is increasing in emergency departments, and it is almost entirely preventable with proper patient education and dosing guidance.
🧠 CHS is strongly associated with daily or near-daily use of high-potency THC products, and the mechanism likely involves CB1 receptor desensitization in the gut-brain axis.
🔹 In my clinic of over 30,000 patients, every case of CHS I have encountered resolved when we reduced frequency, lowered potency, or incorporated tolerance breaks.
⚖️ Rising ER numbers reflect both increased cannabis consumption post-legalization and better clinician awareness of the diagnosis, not a new epidemic.
🔹 The takeaway is clear: cannabis medicine requires the same respect for dosing that we give every other therapeutic agent, and patients deserve clinician guidance rather than fear-based headlines.
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