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Medical cannabis in moderate to severe complex motor disorders in children
Pediatrics (cerebral palsy & oncology)
PubMed · 2018
Improvement in spasticity, dystonia, sleep, pain and quality of life in children with complex motor disorders.

Medical cannabis in moderate to severe complex motor disorders in children
Medical cannabis in moderate to severe | Brazcann
Introduction and clinical context
The study Medical cannabis in moderate to severe complex motor disorders in children (PubMed · 2018) is part of the scientific research on the use of cannabinoids in pediatrics.
In pediatrics, medical cannabis is studied for spasticity in cerebral palsy, symptom control in oncology and palliative care, and complex motor disorders. Studies report an improvement in symptoms and quality of life in some cases, with an acceptable tolerability profile, but not always statistical superiority over placebo. Use in children requires careful indication, adjusted doses and specialized follow-up.
Understanding what science shows about the use of cannabinoids in pediatrics helps patients and healthcare professionals make safer, well-founded decisions, based on evidence rather than common sense.
Methodology and findings
This study evaluated the topic based on clinical data. Improvement in spasticity, dystonia, sleep, pain and quality of life in children with complex motor disorders. The findings contribute to the body of evidence and should be interpreted in the context of other studies. Each study adds to the body of evidence guiding the responsible use of cannabinoids.
Mechanism of action and safety
In pediatrics, prescribing cannabinoids requires redoubled care: the developing brain is more sensitive to THC's effects, which is why CBD-rich formulations are favored in many indications. The mechanisms involve the modulation of neuronal excitability, spasticity and symptoms such as pain and nausea. Safety requires weight-adjusted doses, slow titration and monitoring of drowsiness, appetite changes and interactions. Use should be careful, led by a specialized team and integrated into overall pediatric care.
Regulation in Brazil (Anvisa)
In Brazil, access to cannabis products is regulated by Anvisa — mainly through RDC 660/2022 (patient import with a medical prescription) and the new manufacturing and import framework, RDC 1,015/2026. Any therapeutic use must start from an individualized medical assessment and prescription. This content is informative and scientific and does not replace the guidance of a healthcare professional.
This is informative content produced by Brazcann; for the full methodology and detailed results, consult the original publication (PubMed · 2018). Access to cannabis treatments must always occur through the regulated pathway, with a prescription and medical follow-up.
Frequently asked questions
Is cannabis used in children?
In specific indications and under specialized follow-up, with adjusted doses and careful indication.
Is there proof of efficacy?
There are reports of symptomatic improvement, but not always statistical superiority over placebo.

