Video

Cannabis Helped a Survivor Maintain Weight, Be Pain Free During Chemo

Author(s):

Kim Stuck credits her cannabis use to the fact that she maintained her weight, was able to work out and was not in pain during breast cancer treatment.

Kim Stuck said that she did not lose or gain weight during her chemotherapy treatments and was still able to work out frequently after her first treatment session, too. She credits this to her use of cannabis throughout her breast cancer experience, she explained.

“I think I think it obviously helped. I was not in pain,” Stuck, a breast cancer survivor and founder and CEO of Allay Consulting, a compliance strategy and services provider for the hemp and cannabis industry, said in an interview with CURE®.

READ MORE: Survivor Says Cannabis Use ‘Was the Best Thing’ During Cancer

Transcript

Sometimes I wish I would have had a baseline, right? I started taking cannabinoids and using cannabis and mushrooms, functional mushrooms, since the beginning. I was so scared and I really just didn't want to die. So I was trying anything I could just to like make the experience go better.

And I want to say that it helped a lot. I know that it did, especially with (the fact that) I didn't lose a pound during chemo, which is really kind of crazy. Usually people lose a lot of weight or gain a lot of weight. And I didn't gain any weight, either. I actually stayed right on and a lot of that was attributed to the cannabis. Just even my daily intake, like inhalation intake, because it would help me eat and it would help with motivation to eat, because a lot of times you just feel terrible, and it's not that you're throwing up all the time. It's that you just like lose motivation. You're just like, “I just don't feel like eating. I'm not hungry,” which is interesting, because I thought it would be kind of different than that.

I think I think it obviously helped. I was not in pain. In fact, after the first treatment, I was still working out every day. And it's a stacking … toxicity is stacking when it comes to chemo. So sometimes your first chemo treatment, you're like, “Oh, it's actually not that terrible. It sucks. It's not fun, but I can make it through.” By the fourth (round of chemotherapy), I was down and out. Like there was no way I couldn't even walk up the stairs in my house. I was so debilitated.

I can't imagine how much worse it would have been without the natural medicine treatments, quite honestly.


For more news on cancer updates, research and education, don’t forget to subscribe to CURE®’s newsletters here.

Related Videos
Dr. Alan Tan is a genitourinary oncology (GU) and melanoma specialist at the Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center in Nashville, Tennessee; an associate professor of medicine in the Division of Hematology and Oncology at Vanderbilt University Medical Center; and GU Executive Officer with the Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology.
Dr. Chandler Park, a medical oncologist of Genitourinary Medical Oncology, at the Norton Healthcare Institute, in Louisville, Kentucky.
Image of woman with blonde hair.
Image of woman with blonde hair.
Image of woman with brown hair.
Image of woman.
Dr. Andreas M. Kaiser is a professor and chief of the Division of Colorectal Surgery in the Department of Surgery at City of Hope comprehensive cancer center in Duarte, California.
Dr. Guru Sonpavde emphasized the importance of better understanding how genetic mutations influence the treatment of cancer care, particularly GU cancers.
Image of woman with blonde hair.
Related Content