Well, you know what "burns my ass" smart pants???
Idiots like you!
Cannabis DOES reduce inflammation and THAT is the reason why it could help!
Also, get your medical facts right! Eating something will NOT "change the composition of your skin secretions in a way that might reduce inflammation...
Admittedly, I was deliberately oversimplifying for you (see below), but you better believe that dietary fatty acid content IS a major player in regulation of inflammation. Here are a few references for your consideration, "doctor":
http://tohtoritolonen.fi/files/pdf/Calder_2006.pdf
As you might know, hemp seeds are a particularly rich source of Omega-3 fatty acids.
http://slu.adam.com/content.aspx?productId=107&pid=33&gid=000316
Research shows that omega-3 fatty acids reduce inflammation and may help lower risk of chronic diseases such as heart disease, cancer, and arthritis. Omega-3 fatty acids are highly concentrated in the brain and appear to be important for cognitive (brain memory and performance) and behavioral function. In fact, infants who do not get enough omega-3 fatty acids from their mothers during pregnancy are at risk for developing vision and nerve problems. Symptoms of omega-3 fatty acid deficiency include fatigue, poor memory, dry skin, heart problems, mood swings or depression, and poor circulation.
It is important to have the proper ratio of omega-3 and omega-6 (another essential fatty acid) in the diet. Omega-3 fatty acids help reduce inflammation, and most omega-6 fatty acids tend to promote inflammation. The typical American diet tends to contain 14 - 25 times more omega-6 fatty acids than omega-3 fatty acids, which many nutritionally oriented physicians consider to be way too high on the omega-6 side.
Now, since you seem to be a bit unclear on this, you probably ought to know that hidradenitis suppurativa is NOT actually an "autoimmune disease". That's because its not lymphocyte mediated, nor is it related to self-antigen attack, the same way true autoimmune disorders like lupus, multiple sclerosis, etc, are. The best current theory on its etiology is that its caused by hair follicle occlusion, which subsequently causes an inflammatory response, cyst development, etc.
My suggestion was that improving your dietary fatty acid content might change the makeup of your sebaceous gland secretions, helping to prevent follicular occlusion. If there is a secondary effect of muting the associated inflammatory response, that's a plus too. Now, again, I'M NOT claiming that this will definitely work; I'm just saying its theoretically possible.
But feel free to ignore me; obviously, I'm an "idiot" and I don't have a clue what I'm talking about. You just stick with the guy who claims that that hemp oil cures metastatic cancer!
but when someone with a REAL medical condition that is incurable comes to ask help or advice for medicating cuz that person has become desperate enough for a solution that he's even willing to try spreading cannabis concentrates on his skin, it's NOT FUNNY!
You see me laughing?
You want to know what's REALLY "not funny"?
That's when half-assed quacks who don't know a sebocyte from a prostaglandin (and I'm
not pointing at you here) make wild-eyed claims about cannabis having magical properties in curing cancer, etc. Then truly sick people, who don't necessarily have a sophisticated understanding about what is wrong with them (now I'm looking at you), and who may really have life-threatening diseases, follow fundamentally unsound "medical" advice out of desperation.
Guess what. . .cannabis has been around for 10,000 years, and its legal or de facto legal in many parts of the globe. If cannabis extracts really could cure cancer, don't you think that would be well-established by now? If this were actually true, wouldn't it be trivial to prove, and in fact, have been proven already years ago?
Yes, as you say, its true that cannabis contains an anti-inflammatory compound. But said compound works on receptors in the BRAIN. Reference HERE:
http://www.rsc.org/chemistryworld/News/2008/June/24060801.asp
Again, I don't see how rubbing the stuff on the outside of your skin is going to do much for you in the way of reducing inflammation. Again, if topical cannabis had significant anti-inflammatory effect, that would also be well established already.
But that's OK. . .Feel free to try it and let us know how it works. Apart from making you smell like weed, I doubt it will hurt you.