Pubdate: Thu, 05 Oct 2006
Source: Coast, The (CN NS)
Copyright: 2006 Coast Publishing
Contact:  http://www.thecoast.ns.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3170
Author: Brent Sedo

HIGH TIME

Eight Years After Falling Down A Flight Of Stairs, Wayne Lalonde Still Suffers.

He fidgets. He loses function in his feet and hands.

He gets migraines. But as part of COMPASS, a groundbreaking medical 
marijuana study, Lalonde may finally find relief.

It Was A Slip That Started It All.

A moment of carelessness that, had the planets been aligned 
differently, may have had few consequences beyond bruises and a 
couple days of walking around with a limp.

But it was not Wayne Lalonde's lucky day, and when he fell down a 
flight of stairs while moving furniture, he fell hard.

"I impacted my spine on 14 stairs on the way down," he says. It 
sounds painful, but Lalonde (not his real name) didn't think he was 
badly hurt. He got up, dusted himself off and finished the move. He 
even went to work the next day, sore but functional. It wasn't until 
the next morning he began to realize the extent of the damage one 
misstep had caused.

Eventually he would learn he had broken a bone in his neck and 
suffered compression fractures to two vertebrae, a ruptured disc in 
his lower back as well as nerve damage to his neck and back.

"I woke up and couldn't move," he recalls. "I went to the doctor, 
went for X-rays, but they only detected the compression fractures.

It took four years for them find everything that was wrong."

It was eight years ago that he fell, and since then Lalonde has lived 
with pain. He hasn't worked. In his early 40s, he can't leave the 
house without a cane. Sitting down at his kitchen table to talk, he 
begins to fidget almost immediately, trying to get comfortable. He 
has varying loss of function in his legs and feet and hands. Perhaps 
worst of all, he gets frequent migraine headaches.

He's seen a number of medical professionals and been through a 
battery of tests, and still doctors can't figure out exactly what is 
wrong or why his symptoms have remained constant over all these years.

He's been through physical therapy and acupuncture and spent hours 
with a chiropractor. There have been more X-rays and MRIs and CT scans.

Not to mention a laundry list of pain medication.

"They've tested me on a number of different medications," he says. 
"I've had nerve blocks done, I've had botox done, they've had me on 
dilaudid, they've had me on amitriptyline--I can't even remember them 
all. A bunch of different ones to try and see if they would relieve 
the headaches, more so than helping with my walking ability."

Nothing really helped, Lalonde says--in fact, often the headaches 
were worse, and he would get nauseous, to boot. But now, due in part 
to his on-going status as a patient at the QE II Pain Management 
Clinic, Lalonde is one of hundreds of people across Canada involved 
in testing a different kind of pain management treatment.

Cannabis for the Management of Pain: Assessment of Safety Study 
(COMPASS) will follow 1,400 chronic pain sufferers over the course of 
one year, 350 of whom will be treating their pain with government 
provided medical marijuana.

In announcing the study, researchers made clear the point was not so 
much to test the effectiveness of cannabis in pain relief, but rather 
what side-effects may result.

Although the government's medical marijuana program--which allows 
patients under doctor's recommendation and with approval of Health 
Canada access to prescription marijuana--has been in place since 
1999, COMPASS is the first study of its kind in the country.

The QE II Pain Management Clinic is one of seven such centres across 
the country currently involved in the study.

The local research is lead by Dr. Mary Lynch, acting director of the 
Pain Management Clinic.

"The criteria for inclusion is very similar to [Health Canada's] 
Medical Marijuana Access Regulations program," she says, adding that 
the Pain Management Clinic began enrolling people after the official 
launch of the study in December 2004, and that the one-year trial 
begins at the time each patient passes the screening process and 
signs their consent.

"Individuals have to have ongoing chronic pain, with an appropriate 
work up where a diagnosis has been given and where traditional 
treatments have been pursued or considered, and have been either 
unsuccessful or deemed to be inappropriate."

Dr. Lynch explains the QE II study will include 50 patients who will 
receive the medical marijuana and a 50-person control group that will 
not. Although some patients, such as Lalonde, come to the study 
already smoking marijuana on their own to deal with their pain, 
previous use is not a pre-requisite.

"If the patient is not already [smoking] cannabis, or even tobacco, 
for that matter, we are not recommending that they start doing so," 
she says. "But if they still want access to cannabis orally then that 
is also acceptable. They can bake it in something, or make a tea."

In the beginning of the study, patients are given a one week-supply 
of marijuana, returning every week for the first month for an 
assessment. Afterwards, the dosage is given in a one-month supply. In 
Lalonde's case, this means 90 grams of bud, provided by Prairie Plant 
Systems of Saskatoon, which holds the contract to grow the government 
marijuana, dispensed from the hospital pharmacy. As a security 
measure, the dispensing package must be returned each month for a 
patient to receive a new supply.

Patients are also issued with a letter to be carried with them at all 
times while in possession of the medical marijuana, signed by 
researchers, indicating to whom it may concern that they are involved 
in the study and legally allowed to be in possession of the drug. Any 
restrictions--such as not operating a vehicle while under medication 
and transporting the marijuana only in the gold foil packaging issued 
by the pharmacy--are also clearly spelled out.

Dr. Lynch says that while there have been a number of studies done on 
the negative effects of prolonged recreational marijuana use, few 
studies have been undertaken to track the pros and cons of using 
marijuana in a prescribed program of medical treatment.

She says that the six years between the start of the federal 
government's medical marijuana program and the beginning of research 
is a bit longer than usual, but can partly be explained by the high 
level of protocol that must be established before any type of study 
is approved by the Canadian Institute of Health Researchers.

"The science on this is growing, and the animal science is compelling 
and robust and shows us cannabinoids do have a potential therapeutic 
implication in many different areas besides pain," she says. "I think 
a part of why the Medical Marijuana Access Regulations and program 
was successful in coming forward is because the animal science has 
been so compelling. But at the same time, because of the connection 
of cannabinoids with marijuana, and the higher regulatory climate, 
that slows research down, more than if we were looking at a new drug 
for hypertension, for example.

If that drug for hypertension was a highly regulated or illegal 
substance, then those researchers would be facing the same level of 
regulatory climate."

Despite the Harper government's recent multi-million-dollar cut to 
medical marijuana research, Health Canada has announced no changes to 
current programs, and QE II patients have been assured COMPASS will continue.

Wherever the science leads, it can't be fast enough for those dealing 
with chronic pain. Terry Bremner is a member of the Canadian Pain 
Coalition and a patient advocate with Action Atlantic, an 
organization of patients and healthcare providers working to improve 
chronic pain care in Atlantic Canada. In addition, he works full time 
setting up pain management support groups across the country on 
behalf of the Chronic Pain Association of Canada. He also leads a 
Halifax monthly support group that has a contact list of 50 members 
(currently there are 3,500 Nova Scotians on an up to five-year 
waiting list to receive treatment at the QE II Pain Management 
Clinic) and their families.

He lives with chronic pain as the result of a childhood hip problem, 
which was then made worse following a near-fatal car accident several 
years ago.

He points to an Action Atlantic study released last year that shows 
460,000 Atlantic Canadians can be classified as living with chronic pain.

"Chronic pain as defined by the doctors is any pain that lasts for 
more than six months," he says. "It's a constant thing that you don't 
have any control over and can effect many facets of life such as 
sleep, appetite, mood and fatigue. And more often than not, when you 
have pain for that long depression comes in. A chronic pain patient 
is basically handcuffed when there isn't a solid diagnosis.

Many people who are in car accidents, for example, suffer injuries 
that don't show up on an X-ray or an MRI or even a CT scan, and they 
suffer for years.

And it becomes a psychological problem, because you start to wonder: 
"If all these medical people can't find the problem, what's wrong with me?"

Although none of the organizations Bremner works with have adopted a 
formal position on the use of medical marijuana to manage pain, any 
scientific advancement to relieve the suffering of even a few 
patients is welcome.

A few of the members of his monthly support group have joined in the 
COMPASS program, and his personal observation is that it has been 
nothing but positive.

"From what I've heard some people have had amazing results," he says. 
"One woman came back to the group one month after getting involved in 
the study, and she says it has saved her life."

He says that the role of medical marijuana for chronic pain patients 
and others seemed to be moving along pretty well a couple years ago, 
until talk of decriminalization of marijuana sidetracked the medical debate.

"All of a sudden it seemed like it became a discussion about 
teenagers and recreational use and the medical benefits were pushed 
under the rug," he says.

Currently, 1,400 Canadians have the Health Canada approval to posses 
marijuana as a medicinal aid (up from 477 in 2002), and those who do 
typically are afflicted with a specific identifiable disease such as 
cancer or MS. Those with chronic pain from a vaguely diagnosed source 
are not eligible, and most doctors, lacking hard science, are still 
reluctant to even suggest marijuana as a health care alternative. 
Knowing that when his year in COMPASS is up he'll be back to 
illegally finding his own medication, Wayne Lalonde is hoping his 
participation in the COMPASS research can play some small part in 
making medicinal marijuana available to chronic pain patients.

"Legalizing or decriminalizing marijuana is a whole separate 
political issue," he says. "This is a health issue.

So if I can play a part in making Canada a more knowledgeable country 
in regard to medicinal marijuana, and help people like me in chronic 
pain get legal access to a product that can help them live better, I 
want to do it."
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MAP posted-by: Elaine