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Cannabinoids


Edited By:

Vincenzo Di Marzo
Istituto per la Chimica di Molecole di Interesse Biologico- CNR

ISBN: 978-0-306-48228-1
Published: 2004-06-10

This book may be purchased as an eBook (pdf) for $99, or individual chapters (pdf) may be purchased from the list below for $19.





Chapters available from this book


Pharmacology and Medicinal Chemistry of THC

Emil Pop

While the psychological and physiological effects of cannabis and its main active ingredient, ?9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) have been studied for many years, reliable data have been generated only starting with the late 1960s when pure THC became available. The pharmacology of cannabis and THC, i...

The Chemical Constituents of Cannabis Sativa and the Endocannabinoid System

Vincenzo Di Marzo and Emil Pop

The chemical composition of Cannabis has been elucidated following long-lasting research efforts. Among the nearly 500 compounds belonging to a large variety of groups, cannabinoids (66 compounds) are typical to this plant. While ?9-tetrahydrocannabinol is responsible for psychoactive properties ...

Cannabinoids and Medicine II: The Role of Cannabinoids in Multiple Sclerosis and Neuronal Damage

Gareth Pryce and David Baker

It is becoming increasingly clear that many neurological diseases share common mechanisms of neurotoxicity and one of primary importance appears to be perturbation of glutamate signaling resulting in excitotoxic neuronal death. The location of these events and the type of neuronal damage leads to...

Endocannabinoids and Related Fatty Acid Derivatives in Pain Modulation: Behavioral, Neurophysiological and Neuroanatomical Perspectives on Cannabinoid Antinociception

Andrea G. Hohmann and J.Michael Walker

Cannabinoids are antinociceptive in animal models of acute and persistent nociception. This review examines the biology of endocannabinoids and behavioral, neurophysi ological and neuroanatomical evidence supporting a role for cannabinoids in modulation of nociceptive transmission. The developmen...

Chemistry and Structure Activity Relationships for Tetrahydrocannibinols and Endocannabinoids

R.K. Razdan

An overview is presented of the chemistry and the known structure activity relationships (SAR) for tetrahydrocannabinols (THCs), endocannabinoids and pyrazole based an tagonists. An attempt has been made to highlight and put in perspective the cannabinoid work carried out before and after the d...

The Pharmacology and Therapeutic Potential of Cannabidiol

R.G. Pertwee

This review surveys the evidence that the non-psychotropic plant cannabinoid, cannabidiol (CBD), has therapeutic potential as a neuroprotective agent and for the management of epilepsy, glaucoma, central and peripheral inflammatory disorders, anxiety, acute schizophrenia, dystonia, nausea and ...

Endocannabinoids

Luciano De Petrocellis, Tiziana Bisogno and Vincenzo Di Marzo

The discovery of endogenous ligands of cannabinoid receptors, the endocannabinoids, opened a new age in research on cannabinoids and their receptors. The endocannabinoids discovered so far are all derivatives of arachidonic acid (or of other long chain polyunsaturated fatty acids), and include...

Cannabinoids and Medicine: Eating Disorders, Nausea and Emesis

Tim C. Kirkham

This chapter explores current knowledge relating to the actions of cannabinoids that are relevant to clinical conditions in which appetite, body weight, nausea or emesis are core features. Following a description of current understanding of the possible role of endocannabinoids in the control of eat...

Cannabinoid Receptors and Signal Transduction

Allyn C. Howlett and Joong-Youn Shim

The cannabinoid receptors are members of the rhodopsin-like family of 7-transmem- brane spanning receptors that are believed to bind their agonist ligands within the central core formed by the interaction of the seven transmembrane helices. Cannabinoid receptors are associated with G proteins o...

Endocannabinoids and Alcohol Drinking

George Kunos, Lei Wang, Jie Liu, Douglas Osei-Hyiaman and Judith Harvey-White

Alcohol is the most widely abused substance in Western societies, and the economic and societal costs of alcoholism surpass the cost of all other drugs of abuse combined. Alcoholism has all the classical hallmarks of drug abuse: chronic excessive alcohol consumption leads to tolerance as well as ...


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