Im 20 years old I was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes when I was 14 always stressed out didnt feel like eating, marijuana helped that, people think marijuana is a drug because dumb commercials try to make you think so Above the Influence all that sh*t is fake tobacco,alcohol both legal substances that kill thousands more then any blunt would do ever do so on that note....(lighter flicking)....(smoke exhale).....chilllll bro
Marite,
It doesn't sound to me like permanent neurological damage. Cannabis is has well known neuroprotective properties which people with diabetes may benefit from, though some studies seem to have established a link between early cannabis use (when the prefrontal cortex is still at peak development) and low achievements both academically and later at work.
Personally, I am both a 32 year old cannabis smoker and a T1 diabetic (like your son), but I don't really feel 'damaged' in any particular way by it. It sounds to me like your son hasn't been managing his blood sugars and that may be causing him not to be able to think straight. It sounds to me like he feels helpless and depressed, and this is making everything else worse, making him in turn more unable to lift himself from his depression.
What I think might help your son is partly reassurance and in part some practical help, some "tutoring" if you want, to get him used to solve some of the problems he's going through (from sugar management to more complex issues like coursework). He may be difficult to help if I'm correct about him, but this might be the time he needs your help most.
I am a 20 year old male with Type 1 diabetes. I have had it for over 16 years. I use medical marijuana to help treat my symptoms and I have seen a reduction in my overall insulin needs by roughly 60-70%. I also have a continuous glucose monitor which shows very clearly my body's reaction to cannabinoids. I have been looking across the internet for some time now trying to find other people saying the same things I am saying. I have been seeing more and more of it lately; this is for real.
There are budding research projects suggesting that a primary chemical in medicinal marijuana, CBD, helps reduce beta cell death in people with type 1 diabetes. That's it. That's the crux of this horrible disease. Science is smart, and science will figure out how to get this chemical into a non-controversial, usable form and use it to cure diabetes. I believe in this so strongly...it gives me so much hope. I am already more than halfway there if the massive stockpile of insulin in my fridge is any indication.
For anyone reading this that is still skeptical or holding on to preconceived notions based on ridiculous stigmas that really shouldn't exist anymore: open your f*****g eyes.
If you did your blood testing like you are supposed to you would have avoided the hypo! I test mine 4+ times a day, before every meal and when something feels NOT RIGHT! Don't blame cannabis for your own ignorance of your condition.
hey, it doesnt show and I'm pretty sure thats NOT what their checking you for :D
Hello all, I'm turning forty this year and was diagnosed type 1 at 13 years old. I played a lot of sports through high school and went to college on a sports scholarship to a division one school and even got to play in Europe after graduation. Managing type 1 was easy back then but life after sports began to add some weight and higher A1C levels. I eventually went to the insulin pump with a very welcome change to my glucose levels. But again, as I got older and less active i found my A1C creeping up again. I had never been a marijuana smoker but gave it a try for recreational purposes and found it helped me get to sleep and thus sleep better. Nothing else in my life changed and after 6 months of smoking before bed nearly every evening I had my blood drawn for my A1C and the results were astounding to both me and my doctor. The levels had dropped from 7.4 to 6.1 in that time period and my doctor just looked at me and asked what I had changed. My response raised his eyebrows but as a medical professional he conceded the results were impressive iand asked that i continue with the same regiment so we can continue to monitor any and all changes.
My continued interest as to why it affects the body so positively led me here and prompted me to share my story. Every aspect of my diabetes control has been positively affected by cannibus use, in any form.