Cannabidiol has antipsychotic effects according to Elea's website

I can’t put the website because it is in Spanish.

I read the official website for high-dose pure cannabidiol from the Elea laboratory in my country, and the price is expensive because it’s in very high concentrated doses. The laboratory’s own website says it acts as an antipsychotic. In addition to being an antiepileptic.

I asked DeepSeek if it’s true that cannabidiol reduces dopamine, and it told me this:

“Yes, at high doses, CBD can decrease dopamine release in brain areas such as the nucleus accumbens (mesolimbic pathway) and the striatum (nigrostriatal pathway), especially in contexts of dopaminergic hyperactivity (e.g., psychosis, addiction). However, in the prefrontal cortex (mesocortical pathway), its effect appears more regulatory than inhibitory.”

I tried tea, gummies, oil and I even overdosed the stuff. It didn’t do anything for me.

I’m sticking to my meds!

3 Likes

Where are the trials proving this?

1 Like

@Speedy For antipsychotic effects to occur, the dose of cannabidiol must be no less than 600 mg daily. This is a very high dose and not very affordable given the price.

@everhopeful There are trials that support it, especially at doses of 600 mg and up. But more trials are still needed; they are few and far between.

3 Likes