Marijuana has long been used to effectively treat symptoms associated
 with HIV, such as chronic pain and weight loss. But a growing body of 
research suggests the plant may be able to stop the spread of the virus 
itself.
A Louisiana State University study published in the journal AIDS 
Research and Human Retroviruse narrates how for 17 months, scientists 
administered a daily dose of THC, an active ingredient in cannabis, to 
monkeys infected with an animal form of the virus. Over the course of 
that period, they found that damage to immune tissue in the primates’ 
stomachs, one of the most common areas in the body for HIV infection to 
spread, decreased.
“These findings reveal novel mechanisms that may potentially 
contribute to cannabinoid-mediated disease modulation,” said Dr. 
Patricia Molina, leader of the study. The report goes on to explain that
 while HIV spreads by infecting and killing off immune cells, the 
monkeys that received the daily THC treatments maintained higher levels 
of healthy cells. Similar study in 2011 found that infected monkeys 
treated with THC had a better chance of surviving.

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