SYDNEY, Nov. 12, 2024 – PRESS RELEASE – Research by scientists at the University of Sydney has identified a constituent in the cannabis plant that improves sleep.
Their report is the first to use objective measures to show the component, known as cannabinol (CBN), increases sleep in rats.
The study has been published in the leading journal Neuropsychopharmacology.
“For decades, cannabis folklore has suggested that aged cannabis makes consumers sleepy via the build-up of CBN, however there was no convincing evidence for this,” said lead author on the study Professor Jonathon Arnold, director of preclinical research, at the Lambert Initiative for Cannabinoid Therapeutics and the Sydney Pharmacy School.
“Our study provides the first objective evidence that CBN increases sleep, at least in rats, by modifying the architecture of sleep in a beneficial way,” Arnold said.
CBN is an end-product of the main intoxicating constituent of cannabis, delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). THC in cannabis is slowly converted to CBN over time, which means older cannabis contains higher levels of this compound. It has been suggested that the consumption of older cannabis is associated with a sleepier cannabis “high.”
In the United States, highly purified CBN products are being sold as sleep aids, but there has been little high-quality scientific evidence to support this application.
The research team at the Lambert Initiative for Cannabinoid Therapeutics tested the effects of purified CBN on sleep in rats. Using high-tech monitoring, the experiments provided insights into the rats’ sleep patterns including the amount of non-rapid eye movement (NREM) and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep.
NREM is deep sleep that promotes physical recovery and strengthens memories, while REM sleep is associated with dreaming and processing of emotions.
“CBN was found to increase both NREM and REM sleep, leading to increased total sleep time, with a comparable effect to the known sleep drug zolpidem,” Arnold said.
Nonintoxicating
Unlike its parent molecule THC, CBN did not appear to intoxicate rats. THC intoxicates by activating CB1 cannabinoid receptors, which are present in the brain. The study showed that unlike THC, CBN only weakly activates these receptors. To their surprise, the researchers found that a metabolite of CBN had significant effects on cannabinoid CB1 receptors.
A metabolite is a chemical produced via the metabolism of a larger molecule in the body.
They also found that the 11-OH CBN metabolite had some impact on sleep architecture, which might contribute to the overall effects of CBN on sleep.
“This provides the first evidence that CBN indeed increases sleep using objective sleep measures,” Arnold said. “It was a surprise that CBN metabolism in the body can yield a much greater effect on cannabinoid CB1 receptors than the parent molecule CBN, which has much more limited activity.
“At this stage, our results are confined to testing in rats. Further research is needed to see if this translates to humans.”
Further Study
In a parallel study, yet to be published, Professor Iain McGregor, director of clinical research at the Lambert Initiative, initiated a placebo-controlled randomized human clinical trial in insomnia patients. This was led by Ph.D. student Isobel Lavender with leading sleep researcher Dr. Camilla Hoyos from the Woolcock Institute of Medical Research. The trial has now been completed with very promising results that were recently announced at the International Cannabinoid Research Society and Sleep DownUnder scientific conferences.
“Our research encourages further basic and clinical research on CBN as a new treatment strategy for sleep disorders, including insomnia,” McGregor said. “Our clinical study only administered CBN on a single occasion. A trial on a larger scale, that includes repeated dosing, is the logical next step.”
Arnold said, “The team has now commenced a preclinical drug discovery program around CBN, as well as observing whether the pro-sleep effects of CBN can be further amplified by other molecules found in cannabis, or by conventional sleep aids, such as melatonin.”