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10 Things You Never Knew About Cannabis Roots

cannabis roots

No part of the cannabis plant is useless.

While the buds and leaves usually take center stage, it turns out there are more to the roots than what many of us assumed.

In fact, people have been incorporating cannabis roots into medicine for thousands of years.

Check out these 10 things you probably never knew about cannabis roots!

#1) Long history of medicinal usage

The first recorded use of cannabis root as medicine dates back to roughly 2700 BCE in the Pên Ts’ao ching. Translated as The Classic of Herbal Medicine, this ancient Chinese text by the Emperor Shen-nung mentions that cannabis root was a remedy for pain relief. Dried and ground up to form a paste, the treatment was frequently used for broken bones.

In 79 CE, the Roman historian Pliny the Elder wrote in Naturalis Historia that cannabis root was boiled in water for joint cramps, gout, and acute pain relief.

In the early 18th century, English physician William Salmon echoed these claims with a cannabis root and barley mixture for treating sciatica and pelvic joint pain. Needless to say, using cannabis roots is in, well, our roots.

#2) Liver-protecting properties

While the research is limited, in 1971 it was determined that ethanol extract of cannabis roots contain friedelin.

Considered to be an antioxidant, friedlin is thought to have hepaprotective (liver-protecting) properties.

#3) Variety of topical applications

Did you know it is possible to make lip balm from cannabis roots? How about a soothing and healing paste? Dried cannabis roots can easily be incorporated into countless topical applications, which can be infused with olive or coconut oil as well as different essential oils for added healing.

cannabis infused salve

#4.) Reduces Inflammation

Up to the turn of the 20th century, physicians in the United States recommended decoctions of hemp root for treating inflammation. The secret behind the practice? It may have to do with the fact that cannabis roots contain several pentacyclic triterpene ketones. These compounds are praised for their antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory effects.

#5.) Eradicates cancer cells

The pentacyclic triterpene ketones in cannabis roots are also thought to cause apoptosis, or programmed cell death, in cancer cells. Though the research is minimal, cannabis roots may prove to possess effective cancer-fighting properties.

#6.) Promotes healthy cell membranes

Cannabis roots are also shown to have small quantities of choline. Water-soluble, choline is believed to be an essential dietary nutrient that is a precursor to the neurotransmitter acetylcholine – vital to the development and maintenance of healthy cell membranes.

#7.) Strain-specific treatment options

The practice is in its infancy stages, but cannabis roots may also have varying properties depending on strain. Although we still have a lot to learn here, the potential for future remedies in this space is huge.

Stem from cannabis plant

#8.) Cannabinoids present

Did you know cannabis roots contain trace quantities of cannabinoids? The concentration is minimal in comparison to buds or flowers but compounds such as CBD are existent in the roots.

#9.) Used to stop bleeding

Cannabis roots can be dried, ground and boiled for use as an anti-hemorrhagic to stop bleeding. This was particularly useful for post-partum bleeding after childbirth in the ancient world.

#10.) Soothes inflamed, burned, or irritated skin

Experiencing troubled skin? You may want to try applying dry cannabis root. The Greek medical writer Oribasius wrote that dry cannabis root could be used for treating skin eruptions when mixed with pigeon droppings. While you may want to hold off on the guano, raw crushed cannabis roots have shown to be effective for treating a variety of skin conditions.

Cannabis roots contain a rich source of medicinal properties and may be far more valuable than we realized. After all, we’ve hardly scratched the surface here when it comes to understanding the plant as a whole.

But it’s high time for that to change. No more restrictions. We need to explore this plant to its full potential – roots and all.

– This article was originally posted at Green Flower

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