The term "marihuana" is a word with indistinct origins. Some believe it is derived from the Mexican words for "Mary Jane"; others hold that "marihuana" comes from. the Portuguese word marigu-ano which means "intoxicant" (Geller and Boas, 1969: 14). This chapter outlines the many and varied uses of marihuana through history, and deals with its use in medicine and its use as an intoxicant.
The experience of the 1960's might lead one to surmise that marihuana use spreads explosively. The chronicle of its 3,000 year history, however, shows that this "explosion" has been characteristic only of the contemporary scene. The plant has been grown for fiber and as a source of medicine for several thousand years, but until 500 A.D. its use as a mind-altering drug was almost solely confined in India. The drug and its uses reached the Middle and Near East during the next several centuries, and then moved across North Africa, appeared in Latin America and the Caribbean, and finally entered the United States in the early decades of this century (Snyder, 1970: 129).
Meanwhile it had been introduced into European medicine shortly
after the invasion of Egypt by Napoleon and had a minor vogue
as an intoxicant for a time in France.
Regardless of which parts of the world are discussed, many of
the same problems and concerns about cannabis are common to all,
including the United States. Understanding its various uses during
many centuries in diverse countries and continents can perhaps
lead to a better understanding of marihuana in general.
The history of cannabis products and their use has been long, colorful and varied. "To the agriculturist, cannabis is a fiber crop; to the physician, it is an enigma; to the user, a euphoriant; to the police, a menace; to the trafficker, a source of profitable danger; to the convict or parolee and his family, a source of sorrow" (Mikuriya, 1969: 34). The fact is that cannabis has been held simultaneously in high and low esteem at various times throughout recorded history, particularly in our own times.
The volume of information available on the medical application of cannabis is considerable. Occasionally certain references have been condensed or deleted, but this should not detract from the completeness of the report.
This historical survey of the medical uses of marihuana is introduced by abroad overview of its use, including brief notes on current and projected research, and then considers specific historical settings and circumstances in ancient China, moving on to Egypt, India, Greece, Africa, and the Western World.
Cannabis sativa has been used therapeutically from the earliest records, nearly 5,000 years ago, to the present day (Mikuriya, 1969: 34) and its products have been widely noted for their effects, both physiological and psychological, throughout the world. Although the Chinese and Indian cultures knew about the properties of this drug from very early times, this information did not become general in the Near and Middle East until after the fifth century A.D., when travelers, traders and adventurers began to carry knowledge of the drug westward to Persia and Arabia.
Historians claim that cannabis was first employed in these countries as an antiseptic and analgesic. Other medical uses were later developed and spread throughout the Middle East, Africa, and Eastern Europe.
Several years after the return of Napoleon's army from Egypt,
cannabis became widely accepted by Western medical practitioners.
Previously, it had had limited use for such purposes as the treatment
of burns. The scientific members of Napoleon's forces were interested
in the drug's pain relieving and sedative effects. It was used
during, and to a greater extent, following his rule in France,
especially after 1840 when the work of such physicians as O'Shaughnessy,
Aubert-Roche, and Moreau de Tours drew wide attention to this
drug.
With the rise of the literary movement of the 1840-1860 period
in France (Gautier, Baudelaire, Dumas, etc.), cannabis became
somewhat popular as an intoxicant of the intellectual classes.
In the United States, medical interest in cannabis use was evidenced in 1860 by the convening of a Committee on Cannabis Indica of the Ohio State Medical Society, which reported on its therapeutic applications (McMeens, 1860: 1). Between the period 1840-1890, Walton states that more than 100 articles were published recommending cannabis for one disorder or another.
Concern about cannabis as an intoxicant led the government of India to establish the India Hemp Commission of 1893-94 to examine the entire question of cannabis use in India.
Paralleling the question over cannabis use in the latter half of the 19th century was the growing medical use of other medications superior to cannabis in their effects and more easily controlled as to dose. Consequently, medical use of cannabis declined and cannabis began to lose support of the medical profession.
During the years between 1856-1937, cannabis lost its image as
a medicine and was left with a disreputable image as an intoxicant.
Strong public reaction coupled with a campaign in the public press
led to a federal anti-marihuana law in 1937. (The drug was illegal
in many states before 1937.) The issue of medical use remained
active, however, and Dr. William C. Woodward, Legislative Counsel
to the AMA, an opponent of cannabis use and the only physician
to be a witness at the Taxation of Marihuana hearings, stated:
There are exceptions in treatment in which cannabis cannot apparently
be successfully subsituted for. The work of Pascal seems to show
that Indian Hemp has remarkable properties in revealing the subconscious;
hence, it can be used for psychological, psychoanalytic and psychotherapeutic
research (Hearings, House of Representatives, 1937: 91).
Although cannabis drugs are generally regarded as obsolete and
rarely used in "western" medicine today, cannabis is
"still used extensively in the Ayruvedic, Unani and Tibbi
systems of medicine of the Indian-Pakastani subcontinent"
("The Cannabis Problem, 1962: 27). The Pharmacopoeias of
India mention cannabis use in the recent past. Two preparations
of cannabis, a liquid extract and a tincture, are listed in the
1954 and 1966 Pharmacopoeias of India which contain descriptions
of cannabis and its extract and how it is made (Chopra & Chopra,
1957: 9).
A more recent source makes reference to the fact that "in contemporary India and Pakistan, there continues to be widespread indigenous medical, 'quasi-medical,' and illicit use of both opium and cannabis" (Chopra & Chopra, 1957: 12-13). Bouquet notes that hemp resin is occasionally used in the native medicines of the countries where it is collected. He points especially to India where, "the medical systems . . . make much use of cannabis as a sedative, hypnotic, analgesic, anti-spasmodic and anti-hemorrhoidal" (Bulletin on Narcotics, 1962:27).
According to the Canadian Commission of Inquiry into the Non-Medical
Use of Drugs:
There is no currently accepted medical use of cannabis in North
America outside of an experimental context. Although cannabis
has been reported to produce an array of possibly useful medical
effects, these have either not been adequately investigated, or
can be replaced by using other more readily available and convenient
drugs. The natural product's variability in potency and instability
over time are among the factors which have led to its disfavor
in Western 20th century medicine.... cannabis has often been employed
in the past, and is currently used illicitly in North America,
to reduce the secondary symptoms and suffering caused by the flue
and the common cold. These . . . alleged therapeutic properties
of cannabis have not been adequately studied in a scientific context,
and their general medical potential remains a matter of conjecture
(1970: 74).
Similar statements regarding cannabis are to be found in Marijuana,
edited by Erich Goode, and in the textbook Pharmacological Basis
of Therapeutics by Goodman and Gilman (1970: 300). Concerning
therapeutic uses, the latter states:
Although cannabis was once used for a wide variety of clinical
disorders and has even been demonstrated to have antibacterial
activity, there are at present no well substantiated indications
for its use. It is no longer an official drug. Preparations are
rarely available (cannabis preparation and synthetic THC are obtainable
only for research purposes), and prescriptions are regulated by
special tax laws.
Hollister (1971: 27) lists a few difficulties of the therapeutic
use of cannabis:
The Department of Health, Education, and We] fare report to Congress in 1971, Marihuana and Health, repeats the statement of the Canadian Interim Report of Inquiry into the Non-Medical Use of Drugs, and states: "There is no currently accepted medical use of cannabis in the United States outside of an experimental context" (DHEW: 1971: 27). Allen Geller and Maxwell Boas (1969: 4) think that cannabis' "unsavory reputation has largely stymied further research."
Despite the many statements discounting cannabis' therapeutic
usefulness, some authorities maintain that its medical value might
be reborn through further research and/or use. David Solomon,
in his foreword to The Marihuana Papers (1968: xxi) argues that:
Marihuana should be accorded the medical status it once had in
this country as a legitimate prescription item. After 1937, with
the passage of the Marihuana Tax Act and subsequent federal and
state legislation, it became virtually impossible for physicians
to obtain or prescribe marihuana preparations for their patients.
Thus, the medical profession was denied access to a versatile
pharmaceutical tool with a history of therapeutic utility going
back thousands of years.
In a 1970 article, "Pot Facing Stringent Scientific Examination ," reference is made to Dr. Par who states that there are three areas in which "chemical and animal experiments are under way:"
(1) Analgesia-mood elevation plus analgesic power may make useful drug.
(2) Blood pressure reduction-hypertension may be helped by new drugs which lower the blood pressure by what seems to be action on the central nervous system.
(3) Psychotherapeutic-new compounds are antidepressants and antianxiety
drugs (Culliton: 1970).
Mikuriya cites it studies concerning cannabis funded by the National Institute of Mental Health in 1961. The studies were "either specialized animal experiments, part of an observational sociologic study of a number of drugs, or explorations of chemical detection methods" (Mikuriya, 1969: 38).
Feinglass has pointed to four general categories into which the clinical studies of marihuana could be divided (1968: 206-208). They are:
Grinspoon suggests:
Very little research attention has been given to the possibility
that marihuana might protect some people from psychosis. Among
users of the drug, the proportion of people with neuroses or personality
disorders is usually higher than in the general population; one
might therefore expect the incidence of psychoses also to be higher
in this group. The fact that it is not suggests that for some
mentally disturbed people, the escape provided by the drug may
serve to prevent a psychotic breakdown (1969: 24).
Mikuriya lists many possible therapeutic uses of THC and similar
products in his paper "Marihuana in Medicine: Past, Present
and Future." He includes:
Analgesic-hypnotic, appetite stimulant, antiepileptic, antispasmodic,
prophylactic and treatment of the neuralgias, including migraine
and tic douloureaux, antidepressant-tranquillizer, anti-asthmatic,
oxytocic, anti-tussive, topical anesthetic, withdrawal agent for
opiate and alcohol addiction, child birth analgesic, and antibiotic
(1968: 39).
China
The oldest known therapeutic description Of cannabis was by the Emperor Shen-Nung in the 28th century B.C. in China, where the plant had long been grown for fiber. He prescribed cannabis for beri-beri, constipation, "female weakness," gout, malaria, rheumatism and absentmindedness (Bloomquist, 1968: 19).
Egypt
In Egypt, in the 20th century B.C., cannabis was used to treat sore eyes. Additional medical usage was not reported until much later.
India
Prior to the 10th century B.C., bhang, a cannabis preparation, was used as an anesthetic and antiphlegmatic in India. In the second century A.D., a Chinese physician, Hoa-Tho, prescribed it as an analgesic in surgical procedures (Mikuriya, 1969: 34).
From the 10th century B.C. up to 1945 (and even to the present time), cannabis has been used in India to treat a wide variety of human maladies. The drug is highly regarded by some medical practitioners in that country.
The religious use of cannabis in India is thought to have preceded its medical use (Blum and Associates, II, 1969: 73; Snyder, 1970: 125). The religious use of cannabis is to help "the user to free his mind from worldly distractions and to concentrate on the Supreme Being" (Barber, 1970: 80).
Cannabis is used in Hindu and Sikh temples and at Mohammedan shrines. Besides using the drug as an aid to meditation, it is also used to overcome hunger and thirst by the religious mendicants. In Nepal, it is distributed on certain feast days at the temples of all Shiva followers (Blum & Associates, 1969, 11: 63).
The Hindus spoke of the drug as the "heavenly guide," "the soother of grief." Considered holy, it was described as a sacred grass during the Vedic period (Fort, 1969: 15). A reference to cannabis in Hindu scriptures is the following:
To the Hindu the hemp plant is holy. A guardian lives in bhang
... Bhang is the joy giver, the sky filer, the heavenly guide,
the poor man's heaven, the soother of grief ... No god or man
is as good as the religious drinker of Mang. The students of the
scriptures of Benares are given bhang before they sit to study.
At Benares, Ujjain and other holy places, yogis take deep draughts
of Mang that they may center their thoughts on the Eternal . .
. By the help of Mang ascetics pass days without food or drink.
The supporting power of Mang has brought many a Hindu family safe
through the miseries of famine (Snyder, 1970: 125).
Greece
In ancient Greece, cannabis was used as a remedy for earache,
edema, and inflammation (Robinson, 1946: 382-383).
Africa
Cannabis was used in Africa to restore appetite and to relieve
pain of hemorrhoids, its antiseptic uses were also known to certain
African native tribes (O'Shaughnessy, 1842: 431). Various other
uses, in a number of countries, included the treatment of tetanus,
hydrophobia, delirium tremens, infantile convulsions, neuralgia
and other nervous disorders, cholera, menorrhagia, rheumatism,
hay fever, asthma, skin diseases, and protracted labor during
childbirth.
Documents of the 19th century report on the use of cannabis to control diarrhea in cholera and to stimulate appetite. In his reports of the late 1830's and early 1840's, O'Shaughnessy (1842: 431) stated that tetanus could be arrested and cured when treated with extra large doses of cannabis.
John Bell, M.D., Boston, reported enthusiastically in 1857, about the effects of cannabis in the control of mental and emotional disorders as opposed to the use of "moral discipline" to restrain the mentally ill. Similarly, in 1858, Moureau. de Tours reported several case histories of manic and depressive disorders treated with hashish (Walton, 1938: 3).
The Ohio State Medical Society's Committee on Cannabis Indica, convened in 1860, reported that their respondents claimed cannabis successfully treated neuralgic pain, dysmenorhea, uterine hemorrhage, hysteria, delirium tremens, mania, palsy, whooping cough, infantile convulsions, asthma, gonorrhea, nervous rheumatism, chronic bronchitis, muscular spasms, tetanus, epilepsy and appetite stimulation (McMeens, 1860: 1).
The India Hemp Commission (1894: 174) likewise was informed of
similar medicinal uses for cannabis. Specific reports included
the use of cannabis as an analgesic, a restorer of energy, a hemostat,
an ecbolic, and an antidiaretic. Cannabis was also mentioned as
an aid in treating hay fever, cholera, dysentery, gonorrhea, diabetes,
impotence, urinary incontinence, swelling of the testicles, granulation
of open sores, and chronic ulcers. Other beneficial effects attributed
to cannabis were prevention of insomnia, relief of anxiety, protection
against cholera, alleviation of hunger and as an aid to concentration
of attention.
Despite the fact that marihuana was made illegal in the United States in 1937, research has continued on the medical uses of marihuana. The findings include various possible medical applications of cannabis and its chemical derivatives.
One of the most recent and interesting findings (Frank, 1972) concerns the effect of cannabis in reducing intraocular pressure. It was found that as the dose of marihuana increased, the pressure within the eye decreased by up to 30%. This occurred in normal persons as well as in those with glaucoma, a disease of the eye in which increased intraocular pressure may cause blindness. Much more research is necessary in connection with this experimental clinical finding before final judgment can be passed on such a possible therapeutic value.
During the past 20 years in western medicine, marihuana has been assigned antibiotic activity; as a result, several studies relating to this possibility have been undertaken. H. B. M. Murphy (1963: 20) reported investigations in Eastern Europe. He stated that "it is alleged to be active against gram positive organisms at 1/100,000 dilution, but to be largely inactivated by plasma, so that prospects for its use appear to be, confined to E. N. T. (ear, nose and throat) and skin infections."
Dr. J. Kabelikovi (1952: 500-503) and his coworkers carried out tests on rats, which were similar to tests carried out with penicillin in vitro. The alcohol extract of cannabis was bacterially effective against many gram-positive and one gram-negative microorganisms. It was also found that a paste form of external application was successful. According to Kabelikovi, "from a study of 2,000 herbs by Czechoslovakian scientists it was found that cannabis indica (the Indian Hemp) was the most promising in the realm of antibiotics."
In a 1959 publication of Pharmacie, Krejci stated: "From the flowering tips and leaves of hemp, cannabis sativa var indica bred in Middle Europe, were extracted a phenol and an acid fraction. From the acid fraction, two acids were obtained, of which one preserved its antibiotic properties" (p. 349). In another Czechoslovakian publication, Krejci (1961: 1351-1353) referred to two additional samples with antibiotic activity.
Sample I in Fig. 1 has been sufficiently identified as cannabidiolic acid and sample 9 as cannabidiol. Both fractions show antibiotic activity. The results of tests lead us to conclude that the antibacterial action of cannabis sativa is not identical to the hashish effect found, for example, in tetrahydrocannabinol. However, it was established that cannabis sativa is effective as an antibiotic for local infections.
Kabelik, Krejci, and Santavy (1960: 13) include in "Cannabis as a Medicant" the various microorganisms against which cannabis is effective.
Proof could be furnished that the cannabis extracts produce a very satisfactory antibacterial effect upon the following microbes: staphylococcus pyogenes aureus, steptococcus alpha haemolyticus, streptococcus beta haemolyticus, enterococcus, diplococcus pneumonia, B. anthracis, and corynebacterium diptheriae i.e., all of them gram-positive microorganisms. Noteworthy is the effect upon staphylococcus aureaus strains, which are resistant to penicillin and to other antibiotics.
These authors also mentioned that E. coli (gramnegative bacteria) were tested and found to be resistant to the cannabis extract. One of the conclusions was "the possibility of utilizing the antibiotics locally without any danger of producing resistant strains to other antibiotics administered at the same time throughout treatment" (Kabelik, et al., 1960: 13).
Veliky and Genest in "Suspension Culture of Cannabis Sativa," (1970) reported that "the ethanol extract of cultured cells exhibited antibiotic activity against Bacillus megatherium, staphlococcus aureaus and escherichia coli" (p. 493).
Other reports said that "a pronounced antibiotic effect has been observed in South America, where fresh leaves, after being ground, are used as a poultice for furuncles, and in folk medicine in Europe for treatment of erysipelas" (Kabelik, et al., 1960: 8).
This section on the -antibiotic uses of cannabis concludes with a summary of several reports from various countries. In Pharmacopee Arabe: "The ground-up seeds are mixed with bread for people with tuberculosis" (Andrews and Vinkenoog, 1967: 145). In Czechoslovakia: "A preparation from seed pulp was . . . introduced by Sirek to act as a roborant diet in treatment of tuberculosis" (Kabelik, 1960: 8). "In Southern Rhodesia the plant is used as an African remedy for malaria, anthrax, sepsis, black water fever, dysentery, blood-poisoning, tropical quinine-malarial haemoglobinuria, and a wart medicine" (Watt, 1961: 13). In Argentina:
Cannabis is considered a real panacea for tetanus, colic, gastralgia,
swelling of the liver, gonorrhoea, sterility, impotency, abortion,
tuberculosis of the lungs and asthma ... even the root-bark has
been collected in spring, and employed as a febrifuge, tonic,
for treatment of dysentery and gastralgia, either pulverized or
in form of decoctions. The root when ground and applied to burns
is said to relieve pain. Oil from the seeds has been frequently
used even in treatment of cancer . . . (Kabelik, 1960: 8).
In 1949, Davis and Ramsey reported a study of the effect of THC on epileptic children. "The demonstration of anticonvulsant activity of the tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) congeners by laboratory tests (Loewe and Goodman, Federation Proc., 6: 3521 1947) prompted clinical trial in five institutionalized epileptic children" (David and Ramsey, 1949: 284-285). Of these five children, all had severe symptomatic grand mal epilepsy with mental retardation; three also had cerebral palsy; and three had focal seizure activity. The EEG tracings were reported to be grossly abnormal in all five children. The results after treatment with homologues of THC, were reported as follows:
Three children-responded at least as well as to previous therapy.
Fourth child-almost completely seizure free. Fifth child-entirely seizure free.
As a result of their study, David and Ramsey (1949: 284-285) felt
that "the cannabinols herein reported deserve further trial
in non-institutionalized epileptics."
Dr. Vansim of Edgewood Arsenal has written in a recently published book "Psychotomimetic Drugs," that the synthetic preparations of cannabis are of interest. There are three areas where they may be of definite use in medicine (Efron, 1969: 333-334). One concerns the use of a cannabis analogue which Dr. Walter S. Loewe reported very effective in preventing grand mal seizures if given in small doses.
The second use refers to cannabis as an antidepressant. Straub (Walton, 1938: 3), Adams (1942: 726-727), and Stockings (1947, 920-922) point to the possible use of cannabis and cannabis analogues in relieving dysphoria in depressed patients. Other authors (Parker and Wrigley, 1950: 278-279) had lesser success but recommended further research in this field.
A report from London in 1968 suggests that cannabis treats the symptoms and not the cause by focusing the user's attention on his anxieties and pains without helping him to resolve them (Report by the Advisory Committee, 1968: 11).
The third use is described by Douthwaite, who used hashish in 1947 "for reducing of anxiety and tension in patients with duodenal ulcer" (Pond, 1948: 279).
A report in a 1965 issue of Medical News ("Cardiac Glycocides," p. 6) suggests cannabis as treatment for a specific form of malignancy.
Cannabis is recognized as an appetite stimulant, which suggests that the drug might be useful in the treatment of pathological loss of appetite known as anorexia nervosa (Grinspoon, 1969: 21). Similar symptoms exist in terminal cancer patients who, when treated with cannabis over a short period of time, demonstrated stimulation of appetite, euphoria, increased sense of well-being, mild analgesia and an indifference to pain which reduced the need for opiates (DHEW, 1971: 11).
Cannabis has been recently proposed as an adjunct in the treatment of alcoholics and drug addicts. Roger Adams (1942: 726-727) and Todd Mikuriya (1970a: 187-191) noted that the substitution of smoked cannabis for alcohol may have rehabilitative value for certain alcoholics.
Regarding the use of cannabis analogue in the treatment of drug, alcohol and depressive state withdrawal, Thompson and Proctor (1953: 520523) report the following:
Depressive States:
20 cases of neurotic depression-4 improved (20%)
6 cases of psychotic depression-none improved (00%)
Post-Alcoholic Cases:
70 cases--59 reported clinical alleviation of symptoms (84%)
Drug Cases:
6 cases of barbiturate addiction-4 reported amelioration of symptoms (66%)
4 cases of dilaudid addiction-3 reported alleviation (75%)
2 cases of pantopan and one paregoric addiction-all reported smooth withdrawal (100%)
12 cases of Demerol addiction-10 withdrawals in one week (83%)
6 cases of morphine addiction-2 withdrawals without unpleasant
symptoms (33%)
The doctors concluded that "Pyrahexyl (a synthetic cannabis-like drug) and related compounds are beneficial in the treatment of withdrawal symptoms from the use of alcohol to a marked degree, and in the treatment of withdrawal symptoms from the use of opiates to a less marked, but still significant degree" (Thompson & Proctor, 1953:520-523).
Drs. Allentuck and Bowman (1942) undertook a study of the use of marihuana in the morphine abstinence syndrome. They stated:
A series of cases were selected from among drug addicts undergoing
treatment. . . . Comparative results were chartered for the gradual
withdrawal, total withdrawal, and marihuana derivative substitution,
as methods of treatment. . . . 49 subjects were studied. The results
in general, although still inconclusive, suggest that the marihuana
substitution method ameliorated or eliminated (the symptoms) sooner,
the patient was in a better frame of mind, his spirits elevated,
his physical condition was more rapidly rehabilitated, and he
expressed a wish to resume his occupation sooner (p. 250).
In his study of the medical application of cannabis for Mayor LaGuardia's committee, Dr. Samuel Allentuck reported "favorable results in treating withdrawal of opiate addicts with tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), a powerful purified product of the hemp plants" (Mikuriya, 1969: 38).
Roger Adams' detailed studies, as reported by Dr. C. K. Himmelsbach in his 1944 article "Treatment of the Morphine Abstinence Syndrome with a Synthetic Cannabis-Like Compound" (1944:26), indicated that "withdrawal manifestations were considered to be mild. The reported therapeutic value of marihuana was attributed to improved appetite, greater sleep, euphoria, and a reduction of the intensity or elimination of abstinence phenomena." Himmelsbach, however, had lesser success when he studied the effect of a "pyrahexyl" compound on the morphine abstinence syndrome, as noted by his conclusions that:
(1) Pyrahexyl compound appears to possess considerable cannabis-like effect when administered orally, but little or none when given intramuscularly.
(2) When given by mouth In definitely effective amounts pyrahexyl
compound had no appreciable ameliorative effect on the opiate
abstinence syndrome (P. 29).
The New York City Mayor LaGuardia's Committee on Marihuana (1944: 147-148) reported two possible therapeutic applications of marihuana:
The first is the typical euphoria-producing action which might be applicable in the treatment of various types of mental depression; the second is the rather unique property which results in the stimulation of appetite. In the light of this evidence and in view of the fact that there is a lack of any substantial Indication of dependence on the drug, It was reasoned that marihuana might be useful in alleviating the withdrawal symptoms in drug addicts. However, the studies here described were not sufficiently complete to establish the value of such treatment . . . .
A study was then undertaken at Riker's Island (N.Y.) Penitentiary involving 56 morphine or heroin addicted inmates. Two groups were equally matched according to age, physical condition, length and intensity of habit, etc. One group received no treatment or Magendie's solution, and the other received 15 mg. of THC and/or placebo.
"The impression was gained that those who received tetrahydrocannabinol had less severe withdrawal symptoms than those who received no treatment or who were treated with Magendie's solution" the report stated. However, the report further said that this alleged therapeutic use of marihuana should be "investigated under completely controlled conditions" before meaningful conclusions can be developed (New York City Mayor, AU: 147-148).
Some reports indicate that cannabis helps relieve labor pains. Such uses are reported among native tribes in South Africa and Southern Rhodesia: "The Suto tribe fumigates the parturient woman to relieve pain;"the Sotho women of Basutoland "are reported as smoking cannabis to stupefy themselves during childbirth," and have also been known to "administer the ground-up achene with bread or mealiepap to a child during weaning" (Watt, 1962:13).
The use of cannabis in the treatment of leprosy has been described in a 1939 dictionary of Malayan medicine: "Seeds of Hydnocarpus anthelmintim ... form the basis of the Tai Foon Chee treatment of leprosy. After crushing and sieving, they are mixed with cannabis indica in the proportion of two parts of the seeds to one of Indian hemp" (Andrews and Vinkenoog, 1967: 146). Likewise, Watt and Breyer-Brandwijk quote Pappe that "the early colonist employed a decoction in the treatment of chronic cutaneous eruptions, possibly in leprosy (Andrews and Vinkenoog, 1967: 146).
Kabelik, Krejci, and Santavy have reported favorable results "in stornatitis aphtosa, gingivitis, and in paradentoses with a mouthwash of the following composition: Tinct. Cannabis 20.0, Tinct. Chamomillae, Tinct. jernmarum populi (or another tan for example, Tinct. Gallarum) aa 10.0 to be applied in the form of sprays or linaments to the inside of the mouth" (Kabelik et al., 1960: 13).
In reference to the use of cannabis, Chopra and Chopra (1957: 12-13) listed some preparations used in the practice of indigenous medicine in India in 1957. They summarize their article "The Use of the Cannabis Drugs in India" (1957: 12-13) by saying:
. . . with regard to the use of cannabis in Indian indigenous medicine at the present time, it may be said that It was and still is fairly extensively used in both the Ayurvedle (Hindu) and Tibbi (Mohammedan) systems of medicine as an anodyne, hypnotic, analgesic and antispasmodic, and as a remedy for external application to piles. It is also used in the treatment of dysmennorhoea, rheumatism, chronic diarrhoea of the sprue type, gonorrhoea, malaria and mental diseases on the advice of itinerant practitioners of Indigenous medicine as well as quacks who roam about the country. For medicinal purposes the drug is administered by mouth and hardly ever by smoking.
The use of cannabis drugs in indigenous medicine has greatly declined
during recent years for two reasons-firstly, because of the rapid
deterioration of the potency of cannabis drugs in storage, the
specimens available on the market being often Inert and quite
useless; secondly, because a number of potent and effective drugs
of the type used In western medicine are now available on the
market and are used quite extensively by the practitioners of
indigenous medicine in place of cannabis, for the anodyne, sedative
and hypnotic effects. In the rural areas of India, however, the
practitioners of indigenous medicine still use cannabis quite
extensively In their practice.
The same article lists a variety of uses in which cannabis is employed therapeutically in veterinary medicine.
Dr. R. N. Chopra (1940: 361) reports the following medicinal household
uses of Indian Hemp:
The hemp drugs are popularly used as household remedies in the
amelioration of many minor ailments. A mild beverage made from
bhang leaves is believed to sharpen appetite and to help digestion.
Indian hemp Is commonly used as a smoke and as a drink for its
supposed prophylactic value against marihuana in malarious tracts.
Bhang beverages form one of the popular household remedies for
gonorrhoea and dysuria. On account of their mild diuretic and
sedative properties these drinks probably give a certain amount
of symptomatic relief. Likewise, the use of bhang for dysmenorrhea,
asthma, and other spasmodic conditions is not uncommon. A poultice
made from fresh leaves is a common household remedy for painful
affections of the eyes, conjunctivitis, swollen joints, orchitis,
and other acute inflammatory conditions.
Tuberculosis, anthrax, tetanus, and menstrual cramps are among
the miscellaneous medical uses of cannabis reported. Reports from
Mexico indicate the use of marihuana smoking "to relax and
to endure heat and fatigue" (Mikuriya, 1969: 37).
Kabelik et al. (1960: 13) also discuss other varied uses of cannabis.
In human therapy the best results have been obtained with the
following medicaments combined with substances derived from cannabis:
dusting powder together with boric acid (otitis), ointment (staphylococcus
infected wounds, staphylodermia and so on), ear drops (otitis
chron.), alcohol solutions with glycerine (treatment of rhagades
on the nipples of nursing women-prevention of staphylococcic mastitis,)
aqueous emulsions (sinusitis), dentin powder with the IRC (Isolated
Resin from Cannabis) (caries). The preparations mentioned above
have been already tested clinically, and will eventually be made
available for production. . . . the experiments made in clinical
practice, particularly in stomatology, otorhinolaryngology, gynecology,
dermatology, phisiology, with some pharmaceutical preparations
containing antibacterial substances from cannabis have been reported.
Attention has been drawn to the advantageous utilization of the
active substances from cannabis in veterinary medicine, and particularly
in preventive medicine for anthropozoonoses.
Murphy (1963: 20) refers to an article by Lang, "Treatment of Acute Appendicitis with a Mixture of Ma Jen," which says "the drug has apparently been used in China for the treatment of appendicitis." The Xosa tribe in South Africa "employs it for treatment of inflammation of the feet" (Kabelik et al., 1960: 7), while the Mfengu and Hottentot use the plant as a snake-bite remedy (Watt, 1962: 13).
Other therapeutic uses attributed to marihuana are for the treatment of migraine headaches, as an analgesic, and as a hypnotic. Hollister (1971: 28) stated that "other uses which have been proposed for marihuana include the treatment of epilepsy, as prophylaxis for attacks of migraine or facial neuralgia, or as a sexual stimulant."