PINL:GRPOF - Post by User
Comment by
WebSwingeron May 16, 2021 9:10pm
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Post# 33212164
RE:RE:May 28
RE:RE:May 28You can have your opioid nose spray. Be careful because if you take to many sprays or if the spray device is not working properly and sprays too much, you could die because you will stop breathing. You could also get addicted to opioids. Most people dont want to take meds by shoving stuff up their nose all day long, but I've heard that you regularly pick your nose and eat it so it makes sense for you to pick this entry route. Cannabis can replace or reduce morphine intake and the nasal spay might be okay for emergency, and it takes around 10 minutes to work well. Cannabis inhalation provides relief from pain and other things even faster in my opinion. Anyway, the study doesnt have to prove that cannabis inhalation is faster than fentanyl nasal spray for multiple reasons. One reason- the cannabis drug is meant to replace or reduce oral morphine use. The Cannabis drug in my opinion is not extremely targeted to replace or reduce fentanyl nasal spray, but it will do that too. Also, goverment and others want reduction in opioid use, so they will not force tbp to prove that inhaled cannabis works faster than the fentanyl nasal spray which most people don't want. I'm not sure why the onset of action is SO relevant. Even if inhaled cannnabis was slower than oral morphine, it should still be approved if it works and if is faster than edible cannabis. It would make more sense if the study compared onset of action and affects for inhaling cannanbis versus eating cannabis edibles but everybody already knows inhaling would be faster. I'm not sure if oral thc/cbd has been proven to treat pain in oficial studies that count yet, but if it has, then I think we should only be compared to oral thc/cbd regarding onset of action. Anyway, I would not even care if the study is "rigged" in the way you describe, because we need this on the market to help people and to make ME lots of money. To the moon!!