Is there a strain that does not give me the munchies

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umpiremike

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Can any one tell me if there are or is a strain that does not make me want to clean out my fridge or clean out my wallet at the local 7/11?

thanks for any serious answers and haha at any non serious anwers
 
dannyk892009

dannyk892009

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No because they prescribe anorexia diagnosed patients cannabis to make them want to eat. serious answer not joking.
 
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Donk Frog

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It really depends on strain but most of all the person and their tolerance.
I smoke about 2 oz's a week and it is very rare for me to get hungry after a session, but most light weights or a few times a week smokers... eyes good red, they head for the food eat and pass out or burn out ...not my idea of enjoying my buzz.
 
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been

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Speedy herb is an appetite suppressant for me. Your experience may differ. :winking0067:
 
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headband707

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I found this on the web::

Non-munchy Strain?
__________________:cool0041:
How does marijuana cause "the munchies?"

Actually, what it does is bind with a certain neural receptor in your brain responsible for taking care of Ghrelin levels and makes it so your body has no off switch for when satiation is hit. Or in other words, when you smoke its like breaking the off switch on your hunger drive leaving you in a constant state of hunger.


"When someone smokes marijuana, they get the much-fabled "munchies." I know that this occurs, I am just at a loss as to why it does occur. What is the physiological reasons for this to occur? "

ast time the subject of the munchies came up, in 1977--I've been writing this column longer than a lot of you have been alive--all I could tell you was that scientists had ruled out dope-induced fluctuations in blood sugar as a cause. Since then, I'm pleased to inform you, great strides have been made. As it turns out, far from being a mere curiosity, the munchies provide a clue to the workings of one of the body's primary methods of hunger regulation, the endogenous cannabinoid system.

Your body, it seems, contains specialized proteins called cannabinoid receptors. (Broadly speaking, receptors react to certain stimuli and produce certain results.) The best-known cannabinoid is delta 9-tetrahydrocannabinol or THC, the principal psychoactive ingredient of weed (aka cannabis). Far more important from the body's standpoint, however, are the endogenous (i.e., internally synthesized) cannabinoids, endocannabinoids for short, which work like neurotransmitters and are produced as part of the built-in apparatus by which peripheral parts of the body inform the brain that it's lunchtime.

Endocannabinoids and cannabinoid receptors are abundant in the hypothalamus, the region of the brain that plays a pivotal role in appetite regulation. In 1992 researchers identified the first endocannabinoid and named it anandamide, from the Sanskrit ananda, meaning inner bliss. In other words, when you smoke dope, you're replicating (albeit with much greater intensity) an effect the body produces naturally for itself.

Hunger regulation isn't the only thing endocannabinoids do for the body. Though their action is still imperfectly understood, a 1998 research paper suggests that they help you "feel less pain, control your movement, relax, eat, forget, sleep and protect" yourself against stress. In fact, some scientists think they're an important part of the body's general stress-recovery system.

The significant role of cannabinoids in body chemistry has created great excitement about the therapeutic use of THC and related compounds. The most obvious beneficiaries are people who've lost the desire to eat--for example, late-stage cancer or AIDS patients. (In India, in fact, folks have used pot to treat loss of appetite since around 300 AD.) Though research is incomplete, it appears that (a) smoking marijuana is the best means of administering THC; ( food consumption increases primarily in social settings; and © the foods consumed tend to be sweet.

So it's possible that someday the recommended treatment for disease-induced anorexia may consist of lighting up a few joints, sitting around in a group, and munching Oreos. Lest you get the wrong idea, though, appetite-suppressed patients don't necessarily have to get high to enjoy the benefits of marijuana. At the lowest effective dose, test subjects report little or no euphoria, sleepiness, or dizziness.

Cannabinoids have a variety of other medical applications. The use of marijuana in the treatment of glaucoma is well-known. THC, under the name Dronabinol, has been used since 1985 to ease the nausea and vomiting caused by chemotherapy. Cannabinoid antagonists, which inhibit the effects of cannabis-type compounds, have been shown to suppress sugar and alcohol consumption in lab animals and are thought to hold great promise for obese humans, particularly those with a weakness for sweets.

While I'm not pointing any fingers, I'll bet that much of the research on cannabinoids has been conducted by investigators who were toking up in their dorm rooms 30 years earlier, which goes to show that vice can have its usefulness. Here our parents thought we were frivoling away our lives. Ha. We were on the frontiers of science.


- Cecil Adams
 
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billychainsaw

Guest
Ive had good luck with Island Sweet Skunk....its an all day smoke,can cut thru just about anything and just made me wanna go go go :)
 
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headband707

Guest
There are two interesting things about that thread not only the info. but the author Cecil Adams . If you have time google him or her lol peace out Headband707
 
TheIrieOne

TheIrieOne

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nice I actually understood the part with the biology in it.. nice.
 
JayBee

JayBee

International Toker
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good thread but wrong forum. this area for site feedback, etc.
 
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