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Topicals & Creams

Topicals and creams are cannabis-infused products you primarily designed for external use. Here in this chapter, read about how this skincare-based consumption method might be helpful for you, the canna-curious consumer.

Chapter 6 · 3 min read
Topicals & Creams

What Are Cannabis Topicals?

Cannabis topicals are infused with cannabinoids, terpenes, and other compounds found in the plant. Topicals can be purchased in a wide variety of types: from lotions to balms, to salves, to patches to eye creams, and everything in-between.

Topicals are made with whole-plant cannabis extract that manufacturers put through the decarboxylation process, which activates the cannabinoids. Unlike all of the other products we've discussed in our Consumption Methods Guide, topicals are for external use only, and their cannabinoid content is absorbed through the skin.

THC can be absorbed by the CB1 receptors in our skin, muscle tissues, and nerves. This is one of the many excellent ways that cannabinoids can be beneficial for a multitude of ailments. In this specific case, THC acts as an anti-inflammatory and a pain reliever, but will not get you high because it doesn’t travel deep enough to reach your bloodstream. This is an important tidbit to keep in mind because marketing-based misinformation can be common in the current legal cannabis space.

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Creams, lotions, balms, and other topicals can be a great choice for people who suffer from muscle pain but don’t want the psychoactive effects of THC. Even CBD balm has been known to help people get the pain relief they need naturally without taking painkillers.

THC VS CBD Topicals

Once you’ve decided what type of cannabis topical you’d like to try, your next decision will be whether you want THC or CBD, or both. Topicals like massage oils and balms infused with CBD or other non-psychoactive cannabinoids can be beneficial for inflammation and pain relief.

However, studies suggest that topicals infused with whole-plant cannabis with THC offer more potential benefits. As far as we know, this is mainly because THC is perhaps the best pain reliever in cannabis. But as we always say, we need to see many more unbiased studies on the plant medicine.

With the legalization of cannabis in dozens of U.S. states, the consumer market has seen a drastic rise in the demand for various infused products. As such, the popularity of topicals and creams is rising, while increasing the need for more product awareness and consumer knowledge. HashDash has a vast database of this knowledge available to our platform users, and we are adding new educational content daily.

What We Learned: Topicals & Creams

It can be a bit overwhelming to navigate the various choices of cannabis consumption methods and products available to you. However, with a bit of experimenting, you’ll find what you like in no time. Here’s what we learned in our Topicals and Creams chapter:

  • Cannabis topicals are infused with cannabinoids, terpenes, and other compounds found in the plant.
  • Topicals can be purchased in a wide variety of types: from lotions to balms, to salves, to patches to eye creams that are all absorbed through the skin.
  • Topicals are made with whole-plant cannabis extract that manufacturers put through the decarboxylation process, which activates the cannabinoids.
  • THC acts as an anti-inflammatory and a pain reliever, but will not get you high because it doesn’t travel deep enough to reach your bloodstream.
  • THC can be absorbed by the CB1 receptors in our skin, muscle tissues, and nerves.
  • Creams, lotions, balms, and other topicals can be a great choice for people who suffer from muscle pain but don’t want the psychoactive effects of THC.
  • Topicals like massage oils and balms infused with CBD or other non-psychoactive cannabinoids can be beneficial for inflammation and pain relief.

Great work, you have completed our Consumption Methods guide. Look at you go! Soon, you’ll be a cannabis expert with the help of HashDash’s Guides for the Canna-Curious. Answer the question below to close out this Guide officially.

Citations
  1. Cannabinoid Delivery Systemshttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6222489/

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Chapter Question

THC topicals can get you high.

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Cannabis-infused topicals and creams are primarily skincare-based products for external use only. Popular topicals include lotions, massage oil, salves, and balms.

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