I've been Reading about CH for the past few days on RIU and I'm kinda relieved that theres a diagnosis or at least an idea of something going on with this. You people who are saying that marijuana is is god's gift to humanity and that it can't do any wrong just need to stop. YOu're combusting dried plant material and inhaling it and holding it in your lungs AGAINST your bodies urges to purge it. It may not be as bad as cigarettes, but I don't doubt for a minute that I can cause medical problems in some people.
I've known in my heart that the stomach problems I've been having for the past few years HAD to be from all the weed I smoke. I do have unexplainable nausea in the mornings. Not every morning, but I DO get abdominal cramps every single morning. Sometimes I throw up for no reason in the mornings. I actually thought I was getting an ulcer but this makes more sense considering I don't do anything that would cause an ulcer. There's is a running joke between my friends and fmaily that I must be pregnant cause I'm always having morning sickness. This is the Abstract from a paper written on a study of 98 patients with symptoms of canabinoid induced hyperemesis.
Btw, the idea of Canabinoid Hyperemesis was started in Australia, which is considered the standard for what other countries try to model their care systems after.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
To promote wider recognition and further understanding of cannabinoid hyperemesis (CH).
PATIENTS AND METHODS:
We constructed a case series, the largest to date, of patients diagnosed with CH at our institution. Inclusion criteria were determined by reviewing all PubMed indexed journals with case reports and case series on CH. The institution's electronic medical record was searched from January 1, 2005, through June 15, 2010. Patients were included if there was a history of recurrent vomiting with no other explanation for symptoms and if cannabis use preceded symptom onset. Of 1571 patients identified, 98 patients (6%) met inclusion criteria.
RESULTS:
All 98 patients were younger than 50 years of age. Among the 37 patients in whom duration of cannabis use was available, most (25 [68%]) reported using cannabis for more than 2 years before symptom onset, and 71 of 75 patients (95%) in whom frequency of use was available used cannabis more than once weekly. Eighty-four patients (86%) reported abdominal pain. The effect of hot water bathing was documented in 57 patients (58%), and 52 (91%) of these patients reported relief of symptoms with hot showers or baths. Follow-up was available in only 10 patients (10%). Of those 10, 7 (70%) stopped using cannabis and 6 of these 7 (86%) noted complete resolution of their symptoms.
CONCLUSION:
Cannabinoid hyperemesis should be considered in younger patients with long-term cannabis use and recurrent nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pain. On the basis of our findings in this large series of patients, we propose major and supportive criteria for the diagnosis of CH.