Cannabinoids rescue migraine symptoms caused by central CGRP administration in mice

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“This study investigates the therapeutic potential of a combined dose of cannabidiol (CBD) and tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) at a 100:1 ratio (100 mg/kg CBD and 1 mg/kg THC) in mitigating central calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)-induced migraine symptoms in a mouse model.

The 100:1 ratio of CBD to THC was administered intraperitoneally, 60 minutes prior to starting all the assays, followed by intracerebroventricular CGRP administration, 30 minutes later, with behavior assays conducted 30 minutes after CGRP injection. To determine whether pretreatment of CBD:THC could counteract CGRP-induced light aversion, we utilized the light/dark assay, which also recorded motility behavior. To investigate whether CBD:THC pretreatment could alleviate CGRP-induced spontaneous pain, we used the automated squint assay.

Our findings show that pretreatment with 100:1 CBD:THC rescued light aversion caused by centrally administered CGRP in CD1 mice. Additionally, CBD:THC pretreatment rescued the increased resting time in darkness, decreased transitions between light and dark zones, and partially rescued the decreased rearing behavior induced by centrally administered CGRP. Moreover, an open field assay confirmed that centrally administered CGRP did not induce anxiety in a light independent assay. Finally, our findings from the automated squint assay indicate that pretreatment with 100:1 CBD:THC partially rescued centrally administered CGRP-induced spontaneous pain.

Collectively, these results demonstrate that a combination of CBD and THC can alleviate light aversion and pain symptoms induced by a centrally-acting migraine trigger.”

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41182862/

“The medicinal properties of the plant Cannabis can be traced back thousands of years, with some of its earliest records dating to Chinese medicine around 2700 BC, and Indian medicine around 900 BC. During the late 19th to early 20th centuries, many Western physicians considered Cannabis to be the “most satisfactory” remedy for migraine, and, for eight decades, it was the primary treatment for migraine in mainstream Western medical literature.”

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/03331024251392103

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