✦ New CED Clinical Relevance #78 Strong Clinical Relevance High-quality evidence with meaningful patient or clinical significance. ResearchSafetyTHC Why This Matters Clinicians should be aware that cannabis vaping may increase the risk...
Oregon cannabis industry beats THC potency cap in edibles – MJBizDaily
✦ New CED Clinical Relevance #45 Clinical Context Background information relevant to the evolving cannabis medicine landscape. PolicyTHCDosingSafetyIndustry Why This Matters Clinicians should understand that Oregon’s failed potency cap attempt leaves patients...
Cannabis hyperemesis syndrome cases surge in Virginia ERs – YouTube
WHY IT MATTERS: 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. CLINICAL OVERVIEW: 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.