Cannabis has been found to improve sleep duration and sleep quality for those suffering from PTSD, a lot of people use different products from Weed Seeds USA in order to cope with sleep disorders.

The research, published in the Journal of Psychopharmacology, looked at how the use of the drug affects a patient’s sleep.

Using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), it found the use of cannabis helped patients with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) sleep more during the night.

However, they also slept longer than those who did not use cannabis.

Lead author Prof John R. Hawley, from the University of Melbourne’s School of Medicine, said: “We found that people who used cannabis had better sleep in the morning, after getting up, than the control group, which had trouble getting to sleep at all.”

“The study was a randomized double-blind trial.

“We recruited a total of 70 patients with PTSD, many of whom had used cannabis prior to the study, and they were given placebo, and we compared them with 30 patients who had not used cannabis.”

The study participants were treated with nabilone, a synthetic cannabinoid, for a maximum of nine weeks. In addition to taking cannabis, they were also treated with a non-narcotic medication, diazepam, which is used for sleep disorders, and a placebo. It is known that nabilone and diazepam can interact with sleep. Dr Hawley said they had conducted a similar study a few years ago and the results were the same. “We are quite sure that this is not a placebo effect,” he said.

The findings of Dr Hawley’s study were published in a study in this month’s issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry. He said it would now be necessary to further investigate the effects of both nabilone and diazepam, using larger amounts of both drugs in more patients to investigate their effects on sleep. “Our findings are in keeping with many previous studies, but I don’t know of anyone who has ever done a randomized controlled trial where the patients are given multiple diazepam and nabilone tablets, so that’s why it was important for us to use larger doses,” he said. The two medications are often given together for a longer time than the usual method of “coupling” with a benzodiazepine, and they can have an additive effect on the effect of the benzodiazepine. A 2007 study involving 665 people in Australia who were being treated for depression also found that the combination of nabilone and diazepam (commonly called “z-drugs”) was less effective than either drug taken on its own. The study also showed that the two drugs were no more effective than the two drugs taken separately, and that combining the drugs could not counteract the depressant effect of a benzodiazepine. The Australian study is one of the few to show diazepam and nabilone combined.

A 2007 study of 1,133 patients in Mexico and Chile found that diazepam alone was just as effective as the benzodiazepine in treating depression, although more patients receiving the medication experienced insomnia. An article by Dr. David Brownstein, a psychiatrist at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland, in the Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease suggests that combining the drugs may even be worse for depression than doing so on its own. The article is titled “Combined benzodiazepine and nabilone antidepressant: A potential antidepressant with potential risk.” It outlines the studies