individual cannabinoid does. each one represents a potential new medicine for us. we can then breed into the plant the materials that will provide us with a range of beneficial effects. designer cannabis plants are then reduced to a whole plant extract, and that s crucial according to the grand daddy of all marijuana research, israel s dr. raphael mashula. when they ve tried to make drugs using certain compounds from marijuana, it s met with limited success. why is it when you take certain compounds out of the marijuana and try to make a drug, it doesn t seem to work as well? well, one of the reasons possibly is because the thc works better when cannabidiol is there. so if you have both, it works better. he calls it the entourage effect, and that s what gw is doing. every extract will have all the plant s chemicals in it. the extract is then packaged as an approved prescription spray. in order to increase the chances
an approved prescription spray. in order to increase the chances of getting that approval, every step from growing to harvesting to manufacturing is all carefully controlled, regulated and rig lousily tested to strict standards so that every plant, every extract, every dose is identical, safe and effective. it is an expensive and painstakingly slow process. it s taken hundreds of millions of dollars and a decade to develop their first drug for the unrelenting pain and spasms brought on by multiple sclerosis. as a neurosurgeon, myself, i was curious how well this medicine could work. theresa pointer was diagnosed with ms in february of 2004. for years she struggled with pain and exhaustion. she tried just about everything, but found the drugs prescribed to her were either ineffective or had awful side effects. but one day in 2005, she read in the newspaper about clinical
the materials that will provide us with a range of beneficial effects. designer cannabis plants are then reduced to a whole plant extract, and that s crucial according to the grand daddy of all marijuana research, israel s dr. raphael mashula. when they ve tried to make drugs using certain compounds from marijuana, it s met with limited success. why is it when you take certain compounds out of the marijuana and try to make a drug, it doesn t seem to work as well? well, one of the reasons possibly is because the thc works better when cannabidiol is there. so if you have both, it works better. he calls it the entourage effect, and that s what gw is doing. every extract will have all the plant s chemicals in it. the extract is then packaged as an approved prescription spray. in order to increase the chances of getting that approval, every step from growing to harvesting to manufacturing is all carefully controlled, regulated
an approved prescription spray. in order to increase the chances of getting that approval, every step from growing to harvesting to manufacturing is all carefully controlled, regulated, and rigorously tested to strict standards so that every plant, every extract, every dose is identical, safe, and effective. it is an expensive and painstakingly slow process. it has taken hundreds of millions of dollars and a decade to develop their first drug for the unrelenting pain and spasms brought on by multiple sclerosis. as a neurosurgeon myself, i was curious just how well this medicine could work. theresa pointer was diagnosed with m.s. in february of 2004. for years she struggled with pain and exhaustion. she tried just about everything but found the drugs prescribed to her were either ineffective or had awful side effects.
an approved prescription spray. in order to increase the chances of getting that approval, every step from growing to harvesting to manufacturing is all carefully controlled, regulated and rigorously tested to strict standards, so every plant, every extract, every dose is identical, safe, and effective. it is an expensive and painstakingly slow process. it s taken hundreds of millions of dollars and a decade to develop their first drug for the pain and spasms brought on by multiple sclerosis. as a neurosurgeon myself, i was curious how well this medicine could work. theresa pointer was diagnosed with ms in february of 2004. for years she struggled with pain and exhaustion. she tried just about everything, but found the drugs prescribed to her were ineffective or had awful side effects. but one day in 2005, she read in the newspaper about clinical