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Impact of Cannabinoids on Symptoms of Refractory Gastroparesis: A Single-center Experience

Background and aims Cannabinoids are increasingly used for medicinal purposes, including neuropathy. Gastroparesis is a neuromuscular disorder and neuropathy plays a large role in its pathogenesis. It is thus reasonable that cannabinoids can serve a beneficial role in the management of gastroparesis...

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Autores principales: Barbash, Benjamin, Mehta, Dhruv, Siddiqui, Mohamed Tausif, Chawla, Lavneet, Dworkin, Brad
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6970440/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31993268
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.6430
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author Barbash, Benjamin
Mehta, Dhruv
Siddiqui, Mohamed Tausif
Chawla, Lavneet
Dworkin, Brad
author_facet Barbash, Benjamin
Mehta, Dhruv
Siddiqui, Mohamed Tausif
Chawla, Lavneet
Dworkin, Brad
author_sort Barbash, Benjamin
collection PubMed
description Background and aims Cannabinoids are increasingly used for medicinal purposes, including neuropathy. Gastroparesis is a neuromuscular disorder and neuropathy plays a large role in its pathogenesis. It is thus reasonable that cannabinoids can serve a beneficial role in the management of gastroparesis. Our study evaluates the effect of cannabinoids on gastroparesis symptoms. Methods Twenty-four (n=24) patients with gastroparesis and refractory symptoms were selected from a single gastroenterology practice associated with a tertiary care medical center. The ‘Gastroparesis Cardinal Symptom Index' (GCSI) and an analog scale rating abdominal pain were applied to prospectively assess the effect of cannabinoids, in the form of dronabinol and medical cannabis, on refractory gastroparesis symptoms. Patients completed a GCSI form and rated their abdominal pain, before and after treatment. There was a minimum of 60 days of cannabinoid use between reporting intervals. Total composite GCSI symptom scores, GCSI symptom subset scores, and abdominal pain scores were calculated before and after treatment. Results A significant improvement in the GCSI total symptom composite score was seen with either cannabinoid treatment (mean score difference of 12.8, 95% confidence interval 10.4-15.2; p-value < 0. 001). Patients prescribed marijuana experienced a statistically significant improvement in every GCSI symptom subgroup. Significant improvement in abdominal pain score was also seen with either cannabinoid treatment (mean score difference of 1.6; p-value <0.001). Conclusions Cannabinoids dramatically improve the symptoms of gastroparesis. Furthermore, an improvement in abdominal pain with cannabinoids represents a breakthrough for gastroparesis-associated abdominal pain treatment, for which there are currently no validated therapies.
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spelling pubmed-69704402020-01-28 Impact of Cannabinoids on Symptoms of Refractory Gastroparesis: A Single-center Experience Barbash, Benjamin Mehta, Dhruv Siddiqui, Mohamed Tausif Chawla, Lavneet Dworkin, Brad Cureus Gastroenterology Background and aims Cannabinoids are increasingly used for medicinal purposes, including neuropathy. Gastroparesis is a neuromuscular disorder and neuropathy plays a large role in its pathogenesis. It is thus reasonable that cannabinoids can serve a beneficial role in the management of gastroparesis. Our study evaluates the effect of cannabinoids on gastroparesis symptoms. Methods Twenty-four (n=24) patients with gastroparesis and refractory symptoms were selected from a single gastroenterology practice associated with a tertiary care medical center. The ‘Gastroparesis Cardinal Symptom Index' (GCSI) and an analog scale rating abdominal pain were applied to prospectively assess the effect of cannabinoids, in the form of dronabinol and medical cannabis, on refractory gastroparesis symptoms. Patients completed a GCSI form and rated their abdominal pain, before and after treatment. There was a minimum of 60 days of cannabinoid use between reporting intervals. Total composite GCSI symptom scores, GCSI symptom subset scores, and abdominal pain scores were calculated before and after treatment. Results A significant improvement in the GCSI total symptom composite score was seen with either cannabinoid treatment (mean score difference of 12.8, 95% confidence interval 10.4-15.2; p-value < 0. 001). Patients prescribed marijuana experienced a statistically significant improvement in every GCSI symptom subgroup. Significant improvement in abdominal pain score was also seen with either cannabinoid treatment (mean score difference of 1.6; p-value <0.001). Conclusions Cannabinoids dramatically improve the symptoms of gastroparesis. Furthermore, an improvement in abdominal pain with cannabinoids represents a breakthrough for gastroparesis-associated abdominal pain treatment, for which there are currently no validated therapies. Cureus 2019-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC6970440/ /pubmed/31993268 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.6430 Text en Copyright © 2019, Barbash et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Gastroenterology
Barbash, Benjamin
Mehta, Dhruv
Siddiqui, Mohamed Tausif
Chawla, Lavneet
Dworkin, Brad
Impact of Cannabinoids on Symptoms of Refractory Gastroparesis: A Single-center Experience
title Impact of Cannabinoids on Symptoms of Refractory Gastroparesis: A Single-center Experience
title_full Impact of Cannabinoids on Symptoms of Refractory Gastroparesis: A Single-center Experience
title_fullStr Impact of Cannabinoids on Symptoms of Refractory Gastroparesis: A Single-center Experience
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Cannabinoids on Symptoms of Refractory Gastroparesis: A Single-center Experience
title_short Impact of Cannabinoids on Symptoms of Refractory Gastroparesis: A Single-center Experience
title_sort impact of cannabinoids on symptoms of refractory gastroparesis: a single-center experience
topic Gastroenterology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6970440/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31993268
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.6430
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