Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Posted: 2020-02-14T17:12:10Z | Updated: 2020-02-14T17:12:10Z Marijuana Advocates Sound Alarm About Condition That Causes 'Cyclic Vomiting' | HuffPost

Marijuana Advocates Sound Alarm About Condition That Causes 'Cyclic Vomiting'

Cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome, or CHS, causes severe abdominal pain, nausea and cyclic vomiting among regular marijuana users.

As more and more U.S. states expand marijuana legalization , and with weed usage on the rise, doctors and advocates are warning about a little-known condition affecting heavy users of the drug.

Cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome, or CHS, causes severe abdominal pain, nausea and “cyclic vomiting” among regular marijuana users — and can lead to extreme dehydration and, in rare cases, death.

“It’s very underdiagnosed,” said Dr. Joseph Habboushe, an assistant professor of emergency medicine at New York University Langone/Bellevue Medical Center, who co-authored a 2018 study on CHS . “Doctors aren’t thinking about it. Patients show up to the ER at an average of seven times before they’re diagnosed and have it for many years before it’s diagnosed.”

“Also a lot of patients are in a bit of denial,” Habboushe continued. “These are folks who have been consuming cannabis for many years, and then they develop these symptoms. So it’s hard for them to believe that these symptoms are actually due to the cannabis itself.”

That was the case for Brian Smith Jr., whose mother, Regina Denney , rushed him to an emergency room in Indianapolis in April 2018, when he was 17, after he told her he had been vomiting for three days.

“We were on our way to the ER — I think I had to stop seven times on the way so that he could vomit,” Denney said.

At the hospital, doctors told her that his kidneys were failing. They asked Brian if he smoked marijuana, and he said that he did. Then a doctor asked an unusual question: Do hot showers and baths help? Brian said yes.

“You have CHS,” the doctor told him.

“Patients typically discover that when they take a hot shower, the symptoms go away,” Habboushe explained. “They can spend four or five, six hours a day in the hot shower. So if you ask a patient, do you smoke marijuana? Yes, I do. Do you take hot showers, does that make it better? And if they have this, their eyes will light up. They’ll go, ‘Hey, doc, you know what I have, you must know what I have.’”

It’s unclear exactly why hot showers offer temporary relief for patients with CHS. Habboushe said that a specific receptor in the body’s endocannabinoid system — the TRPV1 receptor, found on the skin — is activated by hot showers and hot peppers.

“For some reason, turning on that receptor helps these patients feel better,” Habboushe said. “We’re not sure why.”

Denney, though, doubted the CHS diagnosis. She had never heard of marijuana causing nausea or vomiting, and was familiar only with its various health benefits, including as a drug that helps curb those symptoms. And Brian told her he had been smoking for years without nausea or abdominal pain.

Still, Brian agreed to abstain from smoking for 45 days. After that, he began to smoke again, and did not experience CHS-type symptoms for six months. Then they returned.

Denney called Brian’s doctors after he experienced another bout of vomiting and dehydration. She said he had lost 40 pounds in a matter of months.

“He started grabbing his back,” Denney said, “and instantly I thought, his kidneys. So I called 911.”

Brian stopped breathing. Denney performed CPR until the ambulance arrived, but paramedics were unable to revive him.

An autopsy later revealed the cause of death as “dehydration due to cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome.”

Denney said she was relieved.

“I have an answer now,” she said.

According to Habboushe’s study, which was based on interviews with 2,127 adult emergency room patients, about a third of those who smoked marijuana at least 20 days a month said they experienced nausea and vomiting that were specifically relieved by hot showers.

If you apply that ratio to the 11 million Americans who consume marijuana at least 20 days a month, approximately 2.75 million people may suffer from some form of CHS.

“I want to be clear, that doesn’t mean a third of them have that extreme version of CHS,” Habboushe said. “But a third may have some level of CHS.”

Some legalization advocates have argued that CHS is rare and affects only “a small percentage of people .”

But Alice Moon, a publicist for the cannabis industry, experienced it firsthand.

Moon said she first noticed low-level symptoms in 2016. Two years later, she had her first major episode.

“For 14 days, every day, I threw up nonstop,” Moon said. She was diagnosed with CHS and no longer uses marijuana, despite promoting it in her work.

“I don’t want anyone to stop using cannabis,” she said. “I want them to be aware of the symptoms.”

The same goes for Denney, who wants marijuana to be legalized so that CHS can be studied without stigma.

“My hope is that we can get doctors to pay attention and to do the studies,” she said. “So we can make sure Brian’s the last that loses his life to CHS.”

Our 2024 Coverage Needs You

As Americans head to the polls in 2024, the very future of our country is at stake. At HuffPost, we believe that a free press is critical to creating well-informed voters. That's why our journalism is free for everyone, even though other newsrooms retreat behind expensive paywalls.

Our journalists will continue to cover the twists and turns during this historic presidential election. With your help, we'll bring you hard-hitting investigations, well-researched analysis and timely takes you can't find elsewhere. Reporting in this current political climate is a responsibility we do not take lightly, and we thank you for your support.

to keep our news free for all.

Support HuffPost

Before You Go

Sick Children Treated With Cannabis
Maggie, 20 months old(01 of14)
Open Image Modal
Maggie has been suffering from seizures since she was six weeks old, and has hundreds of seizures on any given day . Her family relocated from Tennessee to Colorado late last year to use a combination of intensive therapy and cannabis oil to treat her symptoms. (credit:Nichole Montanez)
Hunter, 7 years old(02 of14)
Open Image Modal
Hunter suffers from intractable epilepsy and developmental delay. He's been on numerous medications that have failed to alleviate his seizures and he continues to decline "cognitively, physically and emotionally," according to his mother . He recently started cannabis treatments in the hopes that cannabidiol can provide relief. (credit:Nichole Montanez)
Piper, 2 years old(03 of14)
Open Image Modal
Piper was born with a rare genetic disorder that causes her to suffer from seizures and has rendered her non-verbal, unable to crawl or walk and visually impaired. She has been on nine medications to try to treat her symptoms, and started taking cannabis oil last October. Since she began taking a low dose of cannabis, her family has begun to see small improvements. (credit:Nichole Montanez)
Calvin, 14 years old(04 of14)
Open Image Modal
Calvin has an extreme form of autism that has rendered him nonverbal. After 22 days of taking cannabis, he has begun using words to communicate. According to his mother, he used to have up to 20 head-beating episodes per day, and has only had one episode total in the three weeks he's been using cannabis. "I cried everyday for the first week of him using cannabis," his mother wrote on Montanez's blog . "We no longer had to pull over and restrain him on our way to therapy." (credit:Nichole Montanez)
Sydni, 9 years old(05 of14)
Open Image Modal
Sydni suffers from Doose syndrome, which causes her to have up to thousands of seizures each day. She functions at the academic level of a three-year-old and takes nine different medications . Her family recently started her on cannabis oil in the hopes that it will reduce her seizures. (credit:Nichole Montanez)
Emily, 4 years old(06 of14)
Open Image Modal
Emily suffers from a debilitating form of epilepsy that has yet to be diagnosed. Her family recently moved from Indiana to Colorado in the hopes that a cannabis prescription will help ease her seizures. (credit:Nichole Montanez)
Jordan, 18 years old(07 of14)
Open Image Modal
Jordan was diagnosed with Dravet syndrome when she was six months old and has suffered from seizures for her entire life . On her worst days, she's unable to eat, drink or function. Her family recently relocated from Cleveland to Colorado to try cannabis treatments. (credit:Nichole Montanez)
Tyler, 11 years old(08 of14)
Open Image Modal
Tyler has a rare, drug-resistant form of epilepsy called Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome. He has spent months living in the hospital and has been placed in two medically induced comas. He began taking a low dose of cannabis in October and his family has begun to see "small victories." (credit:Nichole Montanez)
Kennedee, 2 years old(09 of14)
Open Image Modal
Kennedee was born with Walker-Warburg Syndrome, a severe and rare form of muscular dystrophy that claimed her older sister's life when she was just two months old. When Kennedee was born, she was only given a few months to live. Since starting her cannabis treatment, "we have seen a personality we didn't know she had," her mother wrote on Montanez's blog . (credit:Nichole Montanez)
Charlie, 6 years old(10 of14)
Open Image Modal
Charlie suffers from Dravet Syndrome and has seizures in the middle of the night , every night. His family hopes his use of cannabis oil will make him able to communicate and reduce his dependence on other drugs. (credit:Nichole Montanez)
Cora, 6 years old(11 of14)
Open Image Modal
Cora was born with a rare multiple-malformation syndrome that causes her to have body and head overgrowth and various abnormalities of her brain, limbs and vascular system. She also suffers from dozens of seizures a day , has undergone multiple surgeries and uses a head switch to communicate. Her parents are beginning to explore cannabis treatments as a means for relief. (credit:Nichole Montanez)
KC, 9 years old(12 of14)
Open Image Modal
KC has suffered from multiple daily seizures since he was three years old and has yet to respond to any treatments. After two weeks using cannabis, he began exhibiting progress . "A boy who would previously wobble and stumble as he walked was now running up hiking trails and jumping into his dad's arms," his mother wrote on Montanez's blog. "He has even been cracking jokes!" (credit:Nichole Montanez)
Charlotte, 7 years old(13 of14)
Open Image Modal
Charlotte used to suffer from more than 40 seizures per day, and now, according to her mother , "her wheelchair and seizure helmet are in storage collecting dust." Charlotte was the first child in Colorado to be treated with cannabis oil, and her story inspired the name "Charlotte's Web," which is the high-cannabidiol, low-THC strain used to treat other children with similar conditions. (credit:Nichole Montanez)
Zaki, 10 years old(14 of14)
Open Image Modal
Since he was just a few months old, Zaki suffered from up to thousands of seizures per day. He has been seizure-free since he started taking cannabis oil more than a year ago. (credit:Nichole Montanez)