Glossary term
Acidic cannabinoids: Acidic cannabinoids are the forms that occur naturally in the fresh plant before heating or prolonged ageing changes them. The best-known examples are THCA and CBDA. Patients may see them on certificates of analysis or detailed product pages.
Why this term matters
Helps readers understand why labels or lab reports may show both acidic and “active” cannabinoid forms.
UK medical cannabis context
Not a formal NHS access term, but patients may meet it on lab reports and specialist education pages.
What not to assume
Presence on a report does not tell a patient how a product will feel or work for them. Heating changes composition.
Careful wording: Avoid implying acidic cannabinoids are automatically “better” or “safer”.
Related glossary terms
Related MCPH pages
Sources and review notes
This entry is educational vocabulary, not medical advice. Suitability, prescribing, product choice and monitoring belong with a qualified clinician or pharmacist.
- Technical chemistry / terminology review note. Used as terminology context only, not as standalone clinical guidance.
- Certificate of analysis terminology note. Used as terminology context only, not as standalone clinical guidance.
- NHS medical cannabis guidance
- NICE NG144: cannabis-based medicinal products