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Cannabis Forms of Administration

Dosage Forms

Cannabis dosage forms: Flowers, extracts, oils, and capsules at a glance

Not every dosage form fits every therapy goal. Speed of onset, dosability, everyday suitability, and tolerability can differ significantly.

Flowers, extracts, oils, and capsules have different effect profiles in daily use.

The right form depends on symptoms, dosability, and medical therapy planning.

The selection should be medically justified and not based solely on availability.

Which forms are most commonly used in practice?

The most common dosage forms include dried flowers for inhalation, standardized extracts, and oral products such as oils or capsules.

Which form is appropriate depends not only on the product but above all on the desired onset of effect, dosability, and the patient's everyday life.

  • Flowers for inhalation
  • Standardized extracts
  • Oils and capsules
  • Additional magistral preparations as needed

When is which form appropriate?

Inhalative forms can be appropriate when rapid onset of effect is important. Oral products act slower but often longer and more reproducibly.

For some patients, maximum speed is not the decisive factor, but rather predictable, everyday-suitable dosing.

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Relevant indications

These conditions and symptoms are among the most common topics where patients check whether cannabis on prescription may be an option.

Frequently asked questions

Flowers are often used inhalatively and can act faster. Extracts or oral products can often be dosed more reproducibly and usually last longer.

No. Which form fits better depends on the therapy goal, everyday life, desired dosability, and individual tolerability.

The patient's preference is important, but the selection should be medically classified and coordinated with the treating physician.