It might come as a surprise to learn how many good studies there are to support marijuana for multiple sclerosis, especially for subjective symptoms.
But most of those studies were done using standardized products not available in the United States, which means that U.S. providers have to give advice in a country in which marijuana types and products vary considerably. It comes down to a case-by-case approach, Dr. Allen C. Bowling of the Colorado Neurological Institute, Englewood, explained in a video interview at a meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers and the Americas Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis.
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