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Vaporized Cannabis versus Placebo for Acute Migraine: RCT
Fibromyalgia & migraine
PMC · 2024
First double-blind RCT: vaporized cannabis (THC+CBD) superior to placebo in relieving acute migraine at 2h.

Vaporized Cannabis versus Placebo for Acute Migraine: RCT
Vaporized Cannabis versus Placebo for Acute | Brazcann
Introduction and clinical context
The study Vaporized Cannabis versus Placebo for Acute Migraine: RCT (PMC · 2024) is part of the scientific research on the use of cannabinoids in fibromyalgia and migraine.
In fibromyalgia — a chronic widespread pain syndrome with fatigue and sleep disturbances — and in migraine, cannabinoids are investigated for their analgesic potential and their modulation of pain perception. Clinical trials with THC-rich oil and with vaporized cannabis suggest an improvement in symptoms and quality of life in some patients, although the evidence is still limited and the response varies. Use should be individualized and monitored.
Understanding what science shows about the use of cannabinoids in fibromyalgia and migraine helps patients and healthcare professionals make safer, well-founded decisions, based on evidence rather than common sense.
Methodology and findings
This clinical trial was conducted in a controlled manner, comparing the treatment with a reference group. First double-blind RCT: vaporized cannabis (THC+CBD) superior to placebo in relieving acute migraine at 2h. The blinded, controlled design reduces bias and increases the reliability of the finding. Results from controlled trials like this are especially valuable for guiding therapeutic decisions.
Mechanism of action and safety
In fibromyalgia and migraine, cannabinoids modulate the perception and central processing of pain through the endocannabinoid system, with the hypothesis of a clinical endocannabinoid deficiency in these centralized-pain conditions. The most common adverse effects are dizziness, drowsiness and dry mouth, and THC can have a psychoactive effect. Attention is recommended to interactions with other analgesics and psychotropics. Gradual titration and follow-up help balance symptomatic relief and tolerability, with a preference for starting at low doses.
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 (PMC · 2024). Access to cannabis treatments must always occur through the regulated pathway, with a prescription and medical follow-up.
Frequently asked questions
Does cannabis help in fibromyalgia?
There are trials suggesting an improvement in symptoms and quality of life; the evidence is limited and use is individualized.
Does cannabis work for migraine?
A trial with vaporized cannabis outperformed placebo in acute relief; the research is still early.

