Quote Originally Posted by Shrooms
so how would you word this birdgirl? this is what i had said

So basically, in conclusion, the active cannaboids in THC create beneficial anti-inflammitory effects on glioma cells in the brain. These glioma cells are the cells which are . . . are the originating cells of about 50% of brain cancers, of which 85% are glio-astrocytoma.

do you mind helping me out with filling that in? i know they are important now, but I'd much rather have you complete it since you know much more than I
Shrooms, hon, it'd be more accurate to say that the active cannabinoids are in marijuana rather than in THC. THC is one of the active cannabinoids, and cannabinoids are contained in marijuana. Then in our bodies and brains, we have cannabinoid receptors that pick up those cannabinoids.

You also want to make sure you say that in humans, THC has been shown to have beneficial anti-inflammatory effects on the glial cells rather than on glioma cells. Glial cells are the healthy brain cells. Gliomas are the cancerous tumors that form from glial cells.

I'll play teacher for a moment, and you think about this. If THC has beneficial anti-imflammatory effects on glial cells in the brain, what might that mean from a health standpoint? That is, what sorts of brain diseases might benefit from THC?

Glial cells (not gliomas--again, gliomas are the cancers) are used for the support and nutrition of neurons, which are sometimes called nerve cells. Our brains have about 10 times as many glial cells as neurons, and they work together to keep us alive. Google neurons so you'll see what those are. Read your neuron information as well as my post above and that glial cell link I gave you so you yourself can explain why they're important. Hint: it's also in the first sentence of this paragraph.

Glial cells are where half of brain cancers originate. Glial cell brain cancers are called astrocytomas, which account for 85% of brain cancers, and are sometimes lumped into a general category called gliomas. As I said two posts ago, one particular type of astrocytoma is the most deadly, and that's called a glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), but the GBM information doesn't matter much.

If you're writing on the benefits of cannabis, though, you'll want to mention something else I told you earlier. That's that in rat studies using immuno-suppressed rats, THC and other cannabinoids have been shown to have a remarkable ability to slow and/or reverse the growth of glioma cancers. So what might we be able to conclude from that if the same were found to be true in humans? That's going to be an important point to make in your paper.

You've gotta fill in the info you need by reading and understanding this information, sweetie, or you won't be learning anything. Just read and reread this post and the last one very slowly and you'll see what you need to say. Make a stab at completing that paragraph, and I'll check it again later after I've done some more studying of my own, OK?