As someone with IBS, I’ve kept an eye on potential remedies or cures for years, and while I’d love to be supportive of this, I’m skeptical that it will actually amount to something until human trials are effective and treatment actually starts to roll out.
Hard for me to tell in my specific situation. But my flareups from being exposed to trigger foods went from managed in two weeks by the shit the GI prescribed to being managed in forty five minutes to two hours by thc.
I’ve been through some fairly novel medical shit, so they use me in medical education a bit. I’m the local “THIS IS THE DUDE YOU WANT ON CANNABIS” guy they trot around to all the medical CPEs. It’s fun.
The disease is distinct from irritable bowel syndrome (or IBS) although some of the symptoms overlap.
I also have IBS, although as a diagnosis it feels more like a catch-all for when there’s clearly a problem but they’ve ruled out more serious diseases like ulcerative colitis. I have other friends with the same diagnosis as me but very clearly different triggers, symptoms, and things that help, so it seems like we really have some different diseases. That said, I’ve seen some significant improvement in the past few years thanks to a combination of medicines. Not a cure, but less bad days and flare-ups often don’t last as long. I actually saw an as the other day for a completely different medication than any I currently take, so if you haven’t talked to your gastroenterologist about treatment options since before the pandemic it might be worth checking in.
As someone with IBS, I’ve kept an eye on potential remedies or cures for years, and while I’d love to be supportive of this, I’m skeptical that it will actually amount to something until human trials are effective and treatment actually starts to roll out.
Only thing I’ve found what works consistently (and, yeah, I know, eyeroll here) is THC.
But presumably just the symptoms, right? Not the cause. So you’d be more comfortable while your immune system destroys your digestive system
Hard for me to tell in my specific situation. But my flareups from being exposed to trigger foods went from managed in two weeks by the shit the GI prescribed to being managed in forty five minutes to two hours by thc.
Sounds like a great improvement!
I’ve been through some fairly novel medical shit, so they use me in medical education a bit. I’m the local “THIS IS THE DUDE YOU WANT ON CANNABIS” guy they trot around to all the medical CPEs. It’s fun.
Great!
From the article:
I also have IBS, although as a diagnosis it feels more like a catch-all for when there’s clearly a problem but they’ve ruled out more serious diseases like ulcerative colitis. I have other friends with the same diagnosis as me but very clearly different triggers, symptoms, and things that help, so it seems like we really have some different diseases. That said, I’ve seen some significant improvement in the past few years thanks to a combination of medicines. Not a cure, but less bad days and flare-ups often don’t last as long. I actually saw an as the other day for a completely different medication than any I currently take, so if you haven’t talked to your gastroenterologist about treatment options since before the pandemic it might be worth checking in.