The CBD Thread

I just tried a new product "CBD Gummy"
A bit on the steep side, 25$ gets 15 gummies, each with 10mg of CBD Isolate.

I took 1, which is a low dose of CBD for me, and it took nearly an hour but it was quite effective and fairly long lasting.

Problem is they're tasty and tiny, and I had to fight the urge to have another one.


So VitaMan, CBD Isolate: does that mean it was from hemp and did not contain any THC, etc.?
 
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That is correct. I think it is...lets see..yes. The same crystalline powder I buy by the gram, 99.8% pure CBD. Put it in a gummy and it doubles in price.

I have been vaping the crystal and find it quite effective, though a bit strong if I take too much.

I ate the gummy on an empty stomach, went about my day, and suddenly realized I wasn't in much pain and I had an appetite. I made the time honored mistake of shopping with the munchies and went for the 2/for chips and chocolate sales. (yes, and real groceries too)

Although I find it pricey, I like the product. It will be ideal for traveling for work- no intoxication, smells, whatever.
 
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That is correct. I think it is...lets see..yes. The same crystalline powder I buy by the gram, 99.8% pure CBD. Put it in a gummy and it doubles in price.

I have been vaping the crystal and find it quite effective, though a bit strong if I take too much.

I ate the gummy on an empty stomach, went about my day, and suddenly realized I wasn't in much pain and I had an appetite. I made the time honored mistake of shopping with the munchies and went for the 2/for chips and chocolate sales. (yes, and real groceries too)

Although I find it pricey, I like the product. It will be ideal for traveling for work- no intoxication, smells, whatever.

OKAY. I just ordered a 15ml bottle for $99 to give it a try. I had come to the conclusion that the CBD isolate wasn't going to be anywhere near as effective as the synergy of a high CBD cannabis plant, but I am willing to give it a shot.

I'm about to start growing CBD strains for the first time (well, I just harvested a tiny Cannatonic plant): two grows in two grow boxes, one large and one small, with a variety of CBD strains in both of them. I have extremely high hopes that it will help with my anxiety and depression. Thanks so much for your response!!!
 
OKAY. I just ordered a 15ml bottle for $99 to give it a try. I had come to the conclusion that the CBD isolate wasn't going to be anywhere near as effective as the synergy of a high CBD cannabis plant, but I am willing to give it a shot.

Please don't misunderstand me- While the CBD Isolate products are great, effective, and easy to use on their own, combining with THC is much more effective for pain. I use the isolate when I can not be high, and combine when intoxication is OK.

Good luck with your plants. I am waiting for my CBD seeds to come in the mail, and most likely will be grown early next year if everything goes as planned.
 
Please don't misunderstand me- While the CBD Isolate products are great, effective, and easy to use on their own, combining with THC is much more effective for pain. I use the isolate when I can not be high, and combine when intoxication is OK.

Good luck with your plants. I am waiting for my CBD seeds to come in the mail, and most likely will be grown early next year if everything goes as planned.

I'm just trying the oil for anxiety--not so much for pain. Just want to see what this product will be like in comparison to the holistic CBD buds.
 
While pain is my main issue, I also have to take into consideration my anxiety/ptsd. The first time I tried a high CBD ACDC, I became super social, high but not high.

Vaping the CBD powder helps my anxiety, I am not triggered as easily.

Like pure THC, it lacks personality because there are no terpines and thus no entourage effect.
 
http://www.thecannabist.co/2017/11/...gw-pharmaceuticals-pharmaceutical-drug/91562/
A significant event”: CBD-based pharma drug Epidiolex presented to FDA for approval
Analysts have estimated that Epidiolex could be a $1 billion drug for GW Pharmaceuticals

By Alicia Wallace, The Cannabist Staff
A CBD-based pharmaceutical drug in development is one more step closer to potential FDA approval.

Earlier this week, London-based GW Pharmaceuticals plc, which operates in the United States as Greenwich Biosciences, wrapped up its New Drug Application for Epidiolex, a formulation of the cannabis compound cannabidiol (CBD) for the treatment of seizures associated with two specific types of epilepsy: Lennox-Gastaut syndrome and Dravet syndrome.

“The submission is a significant event,” said Steve Schultz, a GW spokesman.

upload_2017-11-13_3-13-19.jpeg
GW Pharmaceuticals’ Epidiolex, a medicine made from cannabis containing cannabidiol (CBD), is shown in New York. (Kathy Young, Associated Press)

The Epidiolex submission file was “thousands of documents” thick, encompassing data and details spanning the areas such as preclinical, clinical, manufacturing and distribution, he said. The submission includes clinical data on 1,500 patients, 400 of whom have had more than a year of exposure to Epidiolex.

“For an orphan drug, that is a very significant set of facts,” he said. “For any pharmaceutical company, it’s a major achievement.”

Now Epidiolex’s fate is in the hands of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, which is expected to respond within 60 days from the Oct. 30 submission.

If the FDA gives the OK, facilities inspections, additional reviews and a potential rescheduling for Epidiolex could occur during the following months, Schultz said. If all goes smoothly, Epidiolex could be on the market by this time next year.

It’s been a busy week for federal oversight of CBD. On Oct. 31, The FDA issued warning letters to four companies that make hemp-derived CBD products for illegally making unsubstantiated health claims about the cannabis compound in treating conditions such as cancer.

When asked if the timing of GW’s NDA submission and the subsequent warning letters were connected, FDA spokesman Michael Felberbaum said Friday he could not comment on the pending NDA. In correspondence with The Cannabist earlier this week, Felberbaum said the agency had issued similar warning letters in 2015 and 2016.

GW is expecting “significant demand” from the Lennox-Gastaut and Dravet patient populations, which total close to 35,000 patients and 8,000 patients, respectively.

The company is running additional trials to assess how Epidiolex could fare in treating other conditions, such as infantile spasms, but there is “an unknown upside … of this sphere of influence” with Epidiolex, Schultz said. GW would not promote Epidiolex for any conditions beyond what it submitted for approval on the label — Lennox-Gastaut and Dravet.

“It will be up to the physician and the patient to determine what the best therapeutic options are,” he said. “Between the patient, physician and payor.”

Analysts have estimated that Epidiolex could be a $1 billion drug for GW Pharmaceuticals. Analysts also are closely watching for the latest results from clinical trials.

“We expect investors will shift their focus to upcoming data presentations expected at the American Epilepsy Society (AES) annual meeting being held Dec. 1-5 in Washington, D.C.,” Andrew S. Berens, a Morgan Stanley analyst, wrote in a research note published Oct. 30. “We expect focus will specifically be on anticipated drug-drug interaction (DDI) data expected at the meeting, as management anticipates presenting pooled data from the two Phase 3 LGS trials showing response rates at different thresholds and in the subgroups of patients with or without concomitant Onfi (clobazam).”

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Mature hemp plants are examined at the CBDRx Natural Healing organic hemp farm in Longmont, Colorado, in October 2015. (RJ Sangosti, Denver Post file)

Clobazam is the generic name for a drug approved for add-on treatment of seizures in children age 2 and older and adults who have seizures associated with Lennox-Gastaut. It is sold in the U.S. under the brand name Onfi.

There is concern about clobazam’s role in the effectiveness of Epidolex, Ken Trbovich, an analyst with Janney Montgomery Scott, previously told The Cannabist. Another concern for GW included the existing prevalence of hemp-derived CBD extracts currently on the market, he said.

On the other hand, companies within the cottage CBD extract industry have expressed wariness about GW’s progress and what the emergence of an FDA-approved formulation of CBD could mean for their livelihoods.

GW’s Schultz previously has stated that Epidiolex will be an “additional option” in the market. He reiterated those statements this week.

“Our goal is to provide an additional option,” he said. “We know that physicians and patients and parents of young patients desire to have a pharmaceutical medicine for the treatment of these seizures, especially these really challenging seizures.”
 
I would sure like to know what the difference is between this billion dollar drug and other CBD oils...
 
I would sure like to know what the difference is between this billion dollar drug and other CBD oils...

somebody in a suit gets paid a shitload of money... GW is the company that's been allowed by the gov to cultivate cannabis in the uk, for use in the nhs, WHILST it's still illegal :redcard:
 
Some of my faves are the 50-state legal hemp strains like Oregon Purple & Cherry Wine that have no detectable THC but 14+% CBD. They look & smell absolutely delicious, smoke beautifully & are a great source of full-spectrum cannabinoids for those who like CBD. I've also tried ACDC, but that 1% of THC sometimes makes me feel altered when I don't want to. (Yep, my THC tolerance is in the basement lol).

I have approximately 5 Cherry hemp seeds saved up... as well as my 3 Lowryder #2's. I really want to plant them but am not sure how big they get. The smell is so loud they wouldn't be very discreet so I may wait another year :spels:
 
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