You have D.O.M.S. (Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness). Delayed onset muscle soreness is felt 24 – 72 hours after exercise. It is caused my microscopic tears to the muscle fibers. The reason it is felt so long after the exercise is because the pain is due to the swelling that forms and it takes 2-3 days for that swelling to appear. CBD is an excellent agent to reduce the swelling.
It is already being used by many professional athletes to proactively treat their delayed onset muscle soreness. They use it immediately after the workout and the D.O.M.S. is prevented.The soreness that is felt 1-3 days after a serious workout can result in pain so severe that a restful night’s sleep becomes impossible.
CBD can fix that too. CBD not only decreases the inflammation that causes the pain, from D.O.M.S. but CBD also improves sleep by decreasing the REM stage of sleep and thus prolonging stage 4 sleep.
Stage 4 sleep is the period of sleep when the body is in a totally relaxed state and the time when the body repairs the muscles that have been strained due to the workout. Bottom line – CBD gets rid of D.O.M.S. & CBD gives you a deep & healing sleep.
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Take two of the most hot-button, tendentious issues of our time – cannabis use and gun rights – combine them, and now we really have a debate. As the law currently stands, medical cannabis patients are not afforded their 2nd amendment right to bear arms. Technically, all cannabis consumers are banned from buying guns, but only medical […]
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Cannabis policy changes in Africa are welcome. But small producers are the losers by Clemence Rusenga
Cannabis is a drug crop with a long history in Africa. Alongside coca and opium poppy, it has been subjected to international control for nearly a century. The International Opium Convention of 1925 institutionalised the international control system and extended the scope of control to cannabis. In 1961 a new international convention was adopted to […]
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University of Sydney to Offer Free Cannabis Testing by Johnny Green
The University of Sydney is launching a fairly robust study in an attempt to, as the university describes it, “investigate cannabis consumption, behaviours, and attitudes among users.” Part of the study involves offering free, anonymous cannabis testing for people that cultivate their own cannabis in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT). Cannabis was decriminalized in 2020 in the […]
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