22/04/2021
CBD & THC
Cannabis contains both THC and CBD, and these compounds have different effects. The best - known compound in ma*****na was delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). This is the most active ingredient in ma*****na. THC creates a mind - altering "high" when a person smokes it or uses it in cooking. This is because THC breaks down when we apply heat and introduce it into the body.
CBD is different. Unlike THC, it is not psychoactive. This means that CBD does not change a person's state of mind when they use it. However, CBD does appear to produce significant changes in the body, and some research suggests that it has medical benefits.
CBD is one of over 60 compounds found in cannabis that belong to a class of ingredients called cannabinoids. it is the major non-euphorigenic component in ma*****na plant.
The least processed form of the cannabis plant is h**p. H**p contains most of the CBD that people use medicinally. H**p and ma*****na come from the same plant, but the two are very different. Over the years, ma*****na farmers have selectively bred their plants to contain high levels of THC and other compounds that interested them, often because the compounds produced a smell or had another effect on the plant's flowers.
However, h**p farmers have rarely modified the plant. These h**p plants are used to create CBD oil. CBD oil is made by extracting CBD from the cannabis plant, then diluting it with a carrier oil like coconut or h**p seed oil.
HOW CBD WORKS
All cannabinoids, including CBD, produce effects in the body by attaching to certain receptors. The human body produces certain cannabinoids on its own. It also has two receptors for cannabinoids, called the CB1 receptors and CB2 receptors.
CB1 receptors are present throughout the body, but many are in the brain. The CB1 receptors in the brain deal with coordination and movement, pain, emotions, and mood, thinking, appetite, and memories, and other functions. THC attaches to these receptors.
CB2 receptors are more common in the immune system. They affect inflammation and pain. Researchers once believed that CBD attached to these CB2 receptors, but it now appears that CBD does not attach directly to either receptor. Instead, it seems to direct the body to use more of its own cannabinoids.