Matthew Bell

Matthew Bell

Matthew Bell is a Jerusalem-based Middle East reporter. He has been with The World since 2001 and has filed stories from cities across the US and abroad.

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Israeli Company Removes THC for New Medicinal Marijuana

The "Tikkun Olam" company sells all kinds of cannabis - legally - out of its shop in Tel Aviv. (Photo: Matthew Bell)

An Israeli company says it has developed a strain of cannabis that contains almost no THC, the chemical that produces a "high" for users. The "Tikkun Olam" company, the name means "healing the world" in Hebrew, sells all kinds of cannabis - legally - out of its shop in Tel Aviv. (Photo: Matthew Bell)

Marijuana might be illegal, but more than a dozen US states now allow the medicinal use of cannabis. Of course, this is controversial, because medical pot still makes people high. But what if the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, the chemical known as THC, could be removed?
That is exactly what an Israeli company says it has managed to do.

It was an Israeli scientist who first isolated tetrahydrocannabinol – or THC – back in 1964. Now, an Israeli company claims to be the first to develop a strain of the cannabis plant that contains almost no THC at all. The company is called “Tikkun Olam,” which means “healing the world” in Hebrew. It grows cannabis in Israel and runs the only legal storefront dispensary in the country.

There is no sign outside to identify the small shop in downtown Tel Aviv, just a security guard who scrupulously checks ID cards of anyone wishing to
enter. There is no smoking going on inside.
But the unmistakable smell of cured marijuana wafts out onto the sidewalk as customers come and go.

Medical marijuana has been legal in Israel for more than 10 years, though the use of cannabis did not take off until 2009. It is tightly controlled by the government, largely through the ministry of health. About 9-thousand Israelis have a license to buy the stuff. 60 year-old Avi – a cancer survivor – is one of them.

“I had a cancer for six years,” he told me while volunteering at the cannabis dispensary. “Now, four years [later], I don’t have nothing.”

The pot might not have cured his cancer, but Avi tells me smoking it helped him get through the chemo treatments. And he is still smoking daily. A few weeks ago, Avi said he started using the new strain called “CBD.” It has almost no THC, which means smoking or ingesting it does not bring on the same intoxicating effects as most types of cannabis.

“I take it during the day,” Avi said. “It doesn’t make me down, you see?”

That is, it helps him stay alert, so he can work or drive or engage in daily activities in a normal way, he said.

“I can do everything with the CBD. With the other one, it’s a bit different, because it makes your muscles [relax],” he said. “For me, it’s the best.”

The new cannabis strain took about 3 years to develop through cross-breeding, according to Zach Klein of Tikkun Olam. There was no genetic engineering involved, he said. The new strain is all natural.

“Avidekel” is the nickname for the CBD strain, Klein said. It has only been available for a few weeks. So far, he said there are only about 10 regular users. But it is showing some promising results.

At Tikkun Olam’s cannabis clinic in Tel Aviv, where staff help new patients learn about using medical marijuana, Maayan Weisberg told me that CBD is already helping people who suffer from infections or nausea, but do not want to smoke to get high.

“Some of our patients, the THC bothers them,” Weisberg said. “It stops them from having a normal day. They want to be alert. They want to have a very strong grasp of reality.”

“Some people just don’t enjoy the lack of control that the THC can make you feel. So, this is a good alternative for them.”

But Weisberg is quick to point out that this new and more benign strain of cannabis will simply not cut it for all medical marijuana users.

“Pain patients and patients that are used to narcotics, they need the THC,” she said. “If there’s no THC in the cannabis, they don’t benefit from the pain relief and the stress that their body is dealing with.”

That is just how one longtime cannabis advocate told me he feels. Standing outside the cannabis dispensary with a plastic shopping bag full of cannabis, David Harari said that medical marijuana has long helped him cope with the effects of Parkinson’s Disease, like the uncontrollable shaking.

When the shaking starts, Harari said smoking as little as half of a cannabis cigarette makes it stop right away.

“The THC helps me,” he said. “I’m skeptical.”

Harari said he does not have much interest in trying the new cannabis strain.

Klein told me his company is getting inquiries from growers abroad, including in the United States. But international collaboration would be tough, because with or without THC, marijuana is still a controlled substance.

Discussion

4 comments for “Israeli Company Removes THC for New Medicinal Marijuana”

  • bcstones

    Talk about reinventing the wheel…guess your interviewer is ignorant of the plant, cannabis. There are hundreds of varieties of cannabis, over 95% of these  DO NOT contain enough THC to be medically useful…these are known as “industrial” hemp (probably 80+%  of the wild cannabis collected by the US authorities is ‘industrial’). Industrial hemp has little to no THC. The byproducts of ‘industrial’ hemp is the seed for nutrition, the fibers for cloth, oil for cooking and/or biofuel…even George Washington, Thomas Jefferson knew the value of ‘industrial’ hemp. It is said that George Washington stated to be/remain free, grow hemp.

    I used to work as an RN in an Oncology ICU…I remember studies that showed to ingest medical cannabis in ‘brownies’ (rather than smoking) was easier on the people & had less of the intoxicating effect but assisted in the overcoming the side effects of chemo.The fact that the Israeli company removed THC from their cannabis, seems to me, that they just have another ‘industrial’ hemp plant on their hands. Did your interviewer even think to ask just how many people were included in the initial studies? (they only have 10 people currently using their ‘product’ now – WOW, that’s a lot isn’t it – NOT!) Did your interviewer even know enough to ask if the hundreds of varieties of industrial hemp that already exist have similar effects as their “new” product? I’d suggest that your interviewers do more background work before their interviews AND ya’ll should do some fact checking prior to airing dribble like this.

    • OrgChemBoy

       Jane you ignorant slut,

      That used to be the rebuttal opening salvo from Dan Aykroyd’s part on “Point-Counterpoint” on the old SNL.

      But seriously bcstones, YOU are the one that needs a little edification.  THC is only one (although it is one of the major components by weight) of the cannabinoids found in pot.  Recent research has shown that CBD (cannabidiol) plays a significant part in the medicinal qualities afforded by marijuana.  The strain (named Avidekel) they are highlighting here was breed to be high in CBD and low in THC.  That way medical patients that would like to reap the benefits of medical marijuana without having to get high (and there are a few of those around, believe it or not) would have a useful product as an alternative.

      Maybe YOU should do a little background work before you try to come off looking like Mr. Know-It-All !

  • RSL

    Just to straighten out the errors in the comments by “bcstones”, industrial hemp strains contain insignificant amounts of BOTH THCa and CBDa. 

    It is a great achievement of the Tikkun Olam crew to achieve this, but there are other more available strains too, Harlequin and Sour Tsunami for example by the CBDProject, in fact based on the ingredient profiles of Tikkun Olam strains, I suspect theirs are the same as CBDProjects, just under a new name, and isolated  and standardized professionally to match the desired profile as is the case with most medical marijuana manufacturers.

     Dutch Bedrocan is nothing but standardized Super Silver Haze, an older benchmark strain. SSH is a cross of Haze, Northern Lights and Skunk btw. 

    Another commercial success is Sativex, which is made from a cross of Hortapharms legendary Skunk # 1, the mother of all modern hybrids, including Bedrocan, and Northern Lights, Haze and wild Ruderalis, possibly.

    All good and well, but if medical marijuana growing was legal, people didn’t need to pay stellar sums to pharma businesses, but instead grow the meds cheaply home.

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/CZ33FBWUE25KTOKZJ424NXSJVM Rob

    Kudos to Org Chem Boy and RSL. You got it exactly right. THC and CBD exert their actions on different cannabinoid receptors and are in fact prescribed for differing medical conditions.

    For certain conditions where CBD is therapeutic (eg: in fibrotic diseases such as CF and cirrhosis) it is equally detrimental to ingest THC, since doing so can actually prevent the desired medicinal effect. Since fairly high (as well as chronic) dosages of CBD are required, hence the need for a strain of marijuana which contains little or no THC but considerable CBD.

    Otherwise, you’d simply be WAY too “high” to function. Additionally, some people don’t appreciate the “high” that results from THC’s stimulation of the CB1 receptor in the first place.