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						 Scientists 
						unpick how cannabis component may fight psychosis 
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		[August 30, 2018]  
		By Ben Hirschler
 LONDON (Reuters) - British scientists have 
		unraveled how a non-intoxicating component of cannabis acts in key brain 
		areas to reduce abnormal activity in patients at risk of psychosis, 
		suggesting the ingredient could become a novel anti-psychotic medicine.
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			 While regular use of potent forms of cannabis can increase the 
			chances of developing psychosis, the chemical cannabidiol or CBD 
			appears to have the opposite effect. 
 CBD is the same cannabis compound that has also shown benefits in 
			epilepsy, leading in June to the first U.S. approval of a 
			cannabis-based drug, a purified form of CBD from GW Pharmaceuticals.
 
 Previous research at King's College London had shown that CBD seemed 
			to counter the effects of tetrahydrocannabinol or THC, the substance 
			in cannabis that makes people high. But how this happened was a 
			mystery.
 
			
			 
			Now, by scanning the brains of 33 young people who were experiencing 
			distressing psychotic symptoms but had not been diagnosed with 
			full-blown psychosis, Sagnik Bhattacharyya and colleagues showed 
			that giving CBD capsules reduced abnormal activity in the striatum, 
			medial temporal cortex and midbrain.
 Abnormalities in all three of these brain regions have been linked 
			to the onset of psychotic disorders such as schizophrenia.
 
 Most current anti-psychotic drugs target the dopamine chemical 
			signaling system in the brain, while CBD works in a different way.
 
			
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			Significantly, the compound is very well tolerated, avoiding the 
			adverse side effects such as weight gain and other metabolic 
			problems associated with existing medicines.
 "One of the reasons CBD is exciting is because it is very well 
			tolerated compared to the other anti-psychotics we have available," 
			Bhattacharyya of King's College said.
 
			"There is an urgent need for a safe treatment for young people at 
			risk of psychosis."
 The Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience at King's 
			College now plans a large 300-patient clinical trial to test the 
			true potential of CBD as a treatment. Recruitment into the trial is 
			expected to start in early 2019.
 
 The latest findings underscore the complexity of the cocktail of 
			chemicals found within the marijuana plant, at a time when cannabis 
			laws are becoming more liberalized in many countries.
 
 (Reporting by Ben Hirschler; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)
 
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