CBD Oil becomes popular for Vegas Workers that Need to Pass Drug Tests

For many in Las Vegas, even having a medical marijuana card in Las Vegas isn’t enough for many workers. All casinos still ban their workers from taking any form of the product, even if it’s to save their lives. For those who desperately need treatment, the legality doesn’t matter: they have to choose to take medical marijuana or lose their jobs.

Most people have heard of a chemical called THC, which is the ingredient that gets users high. But recently, attention has shifted to another compound in marijuana called CBD — and for good reason: it’s the part of marijuana that helps with pain and suffering, and it isn’t detected on drug tests. For those who need the product, medical grade CBD Oil is a perfect way to take it and not be seen as a “drug user” by their employer. It’s completely undetectable and legal in Nevada!

According to Drug testing expert Barry Sample, who is the director of science and technology for Quest Diagnostics, one of the larger diagnostic testing firms in the U.S.

“If the product contains only CBD and has had the THC removed, then an individual being tested would not be expected to test positive for marijuana or marijuana metabolite,” Sample said.

Although CBD and THC act on different pathways of the body, they seem to have many of the same medical benefits. According to a 2013 review published in the British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, studies have found CBD to possess many medical properties that can benefit everyone.

Dr. Ethan Russo, a neurologist and psychopharmacology researcher, notes in a 2011 study that the therapeutic effects of CBD are broad, including: analgesic, anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, anti-emetic (prevents vomiting), anti-anxiety, anti-psychotic, anti-convulsant and cytotoxic in certain cancer cells.

The CBD oil comes in many forms that have shown to benefit many people including those with arthritis. Cannabis-infused lotions, salves, oils, sprays, and other transdermal methods of relief work by binding to a network of receptors called CB2. These CB2 receptors are found throughout the body and are activated either by the body’s naturally-occurring endocannabinoids or by cannabis compounds known as “phytocannabinoids” (e.g., THC, CBD).

 

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