Abstract

SummaryTen years after the successful withdrawal from heroin abuse, a person with diabetes suffered intractable pain and severe muscular emaciation consistent with the syndrome of diabetic neuropathic cachexia. Anti-neuropathic medications failed neither to alleviate suffering and reverse weight loss, nor to stop muscular emaciation. Vigilant evaluation for weight loss aetiologies revealed no responsible aetiology. Prescribing medical cannabis became mandatory, with the intention to alleviate neuropathic pain, regain muscular mass and strengthen legs, enable standing upright and walking normally. Medical cannabis for pain-relief, and the orexigenic properties of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) ingredient successfully achieved these goals.Learning points:Medical cannabis can serve to promptly alleviate severe diabetic neuropathic pain.Past history of heroin abuse was not an absolute contraindication to medical cannabis use.Medical cannabis increased appetite and reversed muscular emaciation.Medical cannabis decreased chronic pain and hence, its catabolic consequences.

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