Medical Disclaimer | This article is for informational and educational purposes only. Cannabinoid supplements are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease or medical condition. PureCraft CBD products are broad-spectrum, zero-THC, and batch-verified at purecraftcbd.com/pages/faq. Individual results may vary.

If you have spent any time in the CBD space, you have encountered the acronym soup: CBG, CBN, THCV, CBC, Delta-8. Marketing copy deploys these terms liberally, often without explaining what they actually are, how they differ from CBD, or why they matter for the person buying a product. This guide cuts through that noise.
The hemp plant (Cannabis sativa L., < 0.3% THC) produces over 100 distinct cannabinoids, along with hundreds of terpenes and flavonoids. Most of these compounds exist in trace concentrations. A small subset — CBD, CBG, CBN, THCV, CBC, and Delta-8 — have accumulated enough research interest and commercial relevance to deserve serious attention. Each one has a distinct mechanism of action. Each interacts with the body's endocannabinoid system (ECS) differently. And each contributes something different to theentourage effect — the phenomenon where hemp's cannabinoids and terpenes produce greater benefits in combination than in isolation.
This pillar post covers all of them systematically: what each cannabinoid is, how it works mechanistically, what the research shows, whether it appears in PureCraft's products, and what it means for drug testing. The complete ECS foundation that makes all of this possible is covered inWhat Is the Endocannabinoid System? A Complete Guide. For a deeper mechanistic dive into CB1, CB2, FAAH, and retrograde signaling, seeHow the Endocannabinoid System Regulates Your Body: A Deep Dive.
Primary Mechanisms: How CBD Works
CBD is the most extensively researched cannabinoid and the primary active ingredient inCBD Oil. Unlike THC — which binds directly to CB1 receptors in the brain, producing the 'high' associated with cannabis — CBD does not directly bind CB1. Instead, it modulates the ECS through multiple indirect pathways, each contributing to different aspects of its therapeutic profile:
CBD's clinical evidence base is the strongest of any cannabinoid. Human studies support applications in: generalized anxiety disorder, social anxiety, PTSD, epilepsy (FDA-approved as Epidiolex), insomnia, chronic pain, inflammation, and a growing body of evidence in depression, cognitive aging, and cardiovascular health.CBD Oil 1000mg is PureCraft's flagship product — nano-optimized broad-spectrum CBD, zero-THC verified by batch-specificbatch-tested COA.
In PureCraft's broad-spectrum formula, CBD is the primary ingredient by concentration, but it doesn't work alone. The minor cannabinoids — CBG, CBN, CBC — and the hemp terpenes in the formula contribute their own mechanisms, amplifying and extending CBD's effects through the entourage effect. Understanding the minor cannabinoids is therefore not just academic curiosity — it explains whyCBD Oil works better than a CBD isolate product at the same milligram dose. SeeFull-Spectrum vs Broad-Spectrum vs CBD Isolate: The Complete Guide for the full broad-spectrum vs isolate comparison.
CBG has earned the nickname 'the mother cannabinoid' for good reason: it is the biosynthetic precursor from which all other cannabinoids are derived. In the young hemp plant, cannabigerolic acid (CBGA) is the primary compound produced. As the plant matures, enzymes convert CBGA into CBDA, THCA, and CBCA — the acidic precursors to CBD, THC, and CBC respectively. By harvest time, most CBGA has been converted, which is why CBG exists only in trace concentrations in mature hemp — typically less than 1% of the cannabinoid profile.
The scarcity of CBG in mature plants makes it more expensive to produce than CBD, which is why most broad-spectrum products contain only trace CBG. PureCraft's broad-spectrum formula retains the CBG present in the hemp extract rather than filtering it out — preserving the entourage effect contribution of this trace but biologically active compound.
CBG's mechanisms are distinct from CBD's in several important ways, making them complementary rather than redundant:
CBG has attracted serious research attention across several application areas:
SeeCBG: What Is It and What Does the Research Show?for the complete CBG deep dive.
CBN is not synthesized directly by the hemp plant like CBD or CBG. Instead, it forms as THC oxidizes and degrades over time — when cannabis is exposed to heat, light, or air. This means CBN content increases as hemp material ages, and fresh hemp contains relatively little CBN. It can also form as CBD oxidizes, which is relevant for the broad-spectrum context. CBN is only mildly psychoactive — much less so than THC — and does not produce the intoxicating effects associated with delta-9 THC.
CBN is often called 'the sleepy cannabinoid,' and the mechanism supports this characterization. CBN hasmild CB1 receptor agonism — the same receptor pathway through which THC produces sedation, but with significantly lower binding affinity and potency. In the brain regions that regulate slow-wave sleep (NREM stage 3), CB1 activation supports deeper sleep architecture and sleep onset.
In practical terms, this means CBN works on a different sleep mechanism than CBD.CBD Oil supports sleep through HPA recalibration (reducing cortisol and the anxiety that prevents sleep onset) and FAAH inhibition (preserving anandamide for sleep quality). CBN addsdirect CB1-mediated slow-wave sleep depth support— making the combination inCBD+CBN Sleep Gummiesmore comprehensive than either compound alone. The gummies formula also includes physiological-dose melatonin for circadian timing support — the third distinct sleep mechanism addressing the full sleep problem.
CBN's research base is smaller than CBD's, and many of the claims made about it in the wellness space outrun the evidence. The honest summary:
The practical evidence: many users ofCBD+CBN Sleep Gummies report meaningful improvement in sleep depth and next-morning restedness — consistent with CBN's CB1-mediated slow-wave mechanism, even where isolated human RCT data is limited. SeeCBN for Sleep: The Science Behind the Sleepy Cannabinoid for the complete CBN sleep analysis.
THCV (tetrahydrocannabivarin) is structurally similar to THC but has a propyl rather than pentyl side chain — a small molecular difference that produces dramatically different pharmacological behavior. Atlow doses, THCV acts as aCB1 receptor antagonist — blocking rather than activating the receptor. This is the opposite of what THC does. The practical implications are significant:
Beyond the obesity model, THCV has shown preliminary evidence for bone health applications — CB2 receptors are expressed in bone tissue, and THCV's CB2 agonism may support osteoblast activity similarly to CBD's documented bone-relevant mechanisms (seeCBD and Bone Health: What Seniors Should Know). The diabetes application is covered inCBD for Type 2 Diabetes: What You Need to Know. THCV research is earlier-stage than CBG or CBN and primarily preclinical — human trial data is limited. SeeTHCV: What Is It and What Does the Research Show? for the dedicated deep dive.
CBC is one of the most pharmacologically interesting minor cannabinoids because it achieves its effects through acompletely different receptor family from CBD and CBG. Rather than acting primarily through CB1 or CB2 receptors, CBC activatesTRPV1 (transient receptor potential vanilloid 1) and TRPA1 channels — pain and temperature sensors distributed throughout peripheral nerves, the gut, and inflammatory tissue. CBC also inhibits the reuptake of endocannabinoids (anandamide and 2-AG), allowing them to remain active at their receptors longer — amplifying the endocannabinoid signal without binding cannabinoid receptors directly.
This non-CB1/CB2 mechanism means CBC is unlikely to produce psychoactive effects regardless of dose — it simply doesn't activate the same brain receptor system that THC and high-dose CBN engage.
SeeCBC: The Inflammation and Mood Cannabinoid Explained for the dedicated CBC analysis.
Delta-8 THC (delta-8-tetrahydrocannabinol) is a structural isomer of delta-9 THC — same molecular formula, different arrangement of atoms. The double bond in the carbon chain sits at the 8th rather than 9th position, producing a compound with similar but weaker CB1 agonism than delta-9. The practical difference: delta-8 is psychoactive but reportedly less intensely so than delta-9, with a lower ceiling effect and somewhat different side effect profile (less anxiety, less paranoia at equivalent doses).
Delta-8 is important to discuss in a cannabinoid guide primarily because of what it is NOT:it is not a minor cannabinoid that occurs naturally in meaningful concentrations in hemp. Delta-8 exists in trace amounts in the hemp plant — commercially available delta-8 products are made by chemically converting CBD into delta-8 via acid-catalyzed isomerization. This synthetic conversion process is the source of most of delta-8's safety concerns: the reaction can produce unwanted byproducts and intermediary compounds that are not well-characterized for safety.
The FDA has issued multiple consumer warnings about delta-8 products. Between 2021 and 2022, the FDA received 104 adverse event reports related to delta-8 THC — including hallucinations, vomiting, tremor, anxiety, dizziness, confusion, and loss of consciousness. The FDA's position is that delta-8 products have not been evaluated or approved and may be marketed in ways that put public health at risk.
The contamination risk is compounded by the lack of quality standards in the delta-8 market. Unlike the CBD industry, which has developed a voluntary COA testing infrastructure (seeHow to Read a CBD Certificate of Analysis (COA): A Step-by-Step Guide), many delta-8 products are sold without adequate testing for residual acids, reaction byproducts, or potency accuracy.
Pure Crafts CBD Oil's broad-spectrum formula does not include delta-8 THC. PureCraft's product philosophy is built on zero-THC verification via third-partybatch-tested COA — not merely meeting the 0.3% legal threshold but confirming 0.00% THC at the batch level. Delta-8 is psychoactive by mechanism, carries unresolved safety concerns, and represents exactly the category of unregulated chemical modification that the COA testing framework exists to screen against. SeeDelta-8 THC vs CBD: What's the Difference and Which Is Safer? for the complete delta-8 vs CBD comparison.
Hemp is legally defined in the US as cannabis containing less than 0.3% delta-9 THC by dry weight. Full-spectrum CBD products contain this trace THC as part of their cannabinoid profile. At a single use, 0.3% THC in a standard serving size is unlikely to produce psychoactive effects or cause an immediate positive drug test. The problem is accumulation: with daily full-spectrum use, delta-9 THC can accumulate in fat tissue to levels that produce a positive urine drug screen.
This is the primary reason PureCraft uses abroad-spectrum rather than full-spectrum formula: the zero-THC approach eliminates the drug testing risk while retaining all the minor cannabinoids (CBG, CBN, CBC) and terpenes that contribute to the entourage effect. You get the entourage benefit without the THC accumulation risk. Every batch is verified at 0.00% THC viabatch-tested COA. SeeCBD and Drug Testing: Will CBD Show Up on a Drug Test? for the complete drug testing guide andFull-Spectrum vs Broad-Spectrum vs CBD Isolate: The Complete Guide for the full-spectrum vs broad-spectrum comparison.
Terpenes are not cannabinoids — they are the aromatic compounds responsible for the distinctive smell of hemp and cannabis. But several hemp terpenes have documented pharmacological activity that contributes meaningfully to the entourage effect.Beta-caryophylleneis the most pharmacologically significant: Gertsch et al. (2008) identified it as the only terpene with direct cannabinoid receptor binding affinity — specifically a CB2 agonist, making it a 'dietary cannabinoid' that contributes CB2 anti-inflammatory effects alongside CBD.Linaloolactivates GABA-A receptors for anxiolytic effects.Myrcene has sedating properties via GABA-A modulation.Limonene modulates 5-HT1A for mood and anxiety effects.
CBD Oil's broad-spectrum formula retains the hemp plant's natural terpene profile, preserving these contributions. CBD isolate products — which strip everything except CBD — lose the terpene contribution entirely, producing a pharmacologically narrower product. SeeTerpenes and CBD: How Hemp Terpenes Enhance the Entourage Effect for the complete hemp terpene guide.

The entourage effect — first proposed by Mechoulam and Ben-Shabat in 1998 — describes the phenomenon where the combined action of cannabinoids and terpenes produces greater therapeutic benefit than any single compound in isolation. The mechanism is not simply additive: the compounds modulate each other's receptor interactions, compete for the same metabolizing enzymes, and produce downstream effects that individual compounds cannot.
Russo's landmark 2011 review 'Taming THC' formalized the entourage concept, demonstrating through both mechanistic analysis and clinical observations that the phytocannabinoid-terpenoid combination explains much of why whole-plant cannabis preparations outperformed synthetic THC in clinical settings. Pamplona et al. (2018) found that CBD-rich whole-plant extracts required significantly lower doses than purified CBD to achieve equivalent seizure reduction in pediatric epilepsy — direct human evidence that the entourage effect has clinical magnitude, not just pharmacological elegance.
|
Combination |
What Each Does |
Synergy Type |
Evidence Base |
|
CBD + CBN |
CBD: HPA recalibration, 5-HT1A anxiety; CBN: CB1 slow-wave sleep |
Additive — different sleep pathways |
PureCraft Sleep Gummies; Murillo-Rodríguez 2014 |
|
CBD + CBG |
CBD: systemic anti-inflammatory; CBG: gut CB2 + antibacterial |
Complementary — different tissue targets |
Borrelli 2013; Izzo 2009 |
|
CBD + CBC |
CBD: 5-HT1A, TRPV1; CBC: TRPA1, endocannabinoid reuptake inhibition |
Additive — broader TRP channel coverage |
Cascio 2010; El-Alfy 2010 |
|
CBD + β-caryophyllene (terpene) |
CBD: systemic ECS; β-caryophyllene: direct CB2 dietary agonist |
Additive CB2 activation from non-cannabinoid pathway |
Gertsch 2008 — β-caryophyllene is the only terpene with direct CB receptor binding |
|
CBD + linalool (terpene) |
CBD: 5-HT1A, HPA; linalool: GABA-A, anxiolytic |
Additive anxiolytic — different neurotransmitter targets |
Guimarães-Santos 2011 |
|
Full-spectrum (all cannabinoids + terpenes) |
Collective — all mechanisms operating simultaneously |
True entourage — synergistic, not merely additive |
Ben-Shabat 1998; Russo 2011; Pamplona 2018 |
The table above makes the key point:each cannabinoid in PureCraft's broad-spectrum formula contributes through a different mechanism. CBD's 5-HT1A and FAAH. CBG's α2-adrenergic and gut CB2. CBN's mild CB1 sedation. CBC's TRPA1 and endocannabinoid reuptake. Beta-caryophyllene's direct CB2 binding. This multi-mechanism coverage explains the clinical observation that broad-spectrum products — at the same CBD milligram dose — produce different and often superior results compared to CBD isolate.
|
Cannabinoid |
Primary Mechanism |
Psychoactive? |
Best For |
Found in PureCraft? |
Drug Test Risk |
Key Research |
|
CBD |
5-HT1A, CB2, TRPV1, FAAH inhibition |
No |
Anxiety, pain, sleep, inflammation, general wellness |
Yes — primary ingredient |
None (zero-THC verified) |
Blessing 2015; Shannon 2019; Hammell 2016 |
|
CBG |
α2-adrenergic, CB1/CB2 partial agonist, 5-HT1A partial antagonist |
No |
Gut inflammation, antibacterial, neuroprotection |
Yes — in broad-spectrum formula |
None |
Borrelli 2013; Valdeolivas 2015; Farha 2020 |
|
CBN |
CB1 agonism (mild), GABA-A modulation |
Mildly sedating at high doses |
Sleep architecture, slow-wave depth |
Yes — in Sleep Gummies |
None documented |
Hollister 1973; Murillo-Rodríguez 2014 |
|
THCV |
CB1 antagonist (low dose) / agonist (high dose) |
Mildly at high doses |
Appetite suppression, metabolic health, blood sugar |
Trace levels possible in broad-spectrum |
Possible at high doses — check COA |
Wargent 2013; Riedel 2009 |
|
CBC |
TRPV1, TRPA1, endocannabinoid reuptake inhibition — no CB1/CB2 |
No |
Anti-inflammatory, neurogenesis, mood |
Yes — in broad-spectrum formula |
None |
Cascio 2010; El-Alfy 2010 |
|
Delta-8 THC |
Partial CB1 agonist |
Yes — milder than Delta-9 |
N/A — PureCraft does not use Delta-8 |
No — PureCraft does not use Delta-8 |
Yes — will cause positive drug test |
LoParco 2023; Kruger 2022 |
|
Delta-9 THC (hemp) |
Full CB1 agonist |
Yes — at meaningful doses |
Entourage effect at trace levels |
Trace (<0.3%) in broad-spectrum |
Yes — accumulates with repeated full-spectrum use |
Russo 2011 |
|
Terpenes (e.g. β-caryophyllene) |
CB2 agonism (β-caryophyllene); GABA-A (linalool); varied |
No |
Entourage effect, targeted anxiolytic/sedative/anti-inflammatory |
Yes — broad-spectrum retains hemp terpenes |
None |
Gertsch 2008; Russo 2011 |
The table makes the PureCraft product philosophy concrete:CBD Oil is broad-spectrum (CBG, CBN, CBC, terpenes — no Delta-8, 0.00% THC) because this combination maximizes entourage benefit while eliminating the drug testing risk and psychoactivity of THC-containing formulas. Every batch is independently verified by an ISO-accredited third-party laboratory — thebatch-tested COA is accessible atpurecraftcbd.com/pages/faq.
PureCraft'sCBD Oil andCBD+CBN Sleep Gummies are formulated on a broad-spectrum hemp extract — meaning:
The nano-optimization of PureCraft's formula — encapsulating cannabinoids in lipid nanoparticles for enhanced bioavailability — means that each milligram of CBD (and each trace cannabinoid) is more efficiently absorbed than standard oil-based CBD. SeeNano CBD vs Regular CBD: What's the Difference and Does It Matter?for the bioavailability comparison.
The result: consistent, effective cannabinoid delivery at lower milligram doses than non-nano-optimized competitors.

Minor cannabinoids are the cannabinoids present in the hemp plant in concentrations below CBD and THC. The primary minor cannabinoids with documented pharmacological activity are CBG (cannabigerol), CBN (cannabinol), THCV (tetrahydrocannabivarin), and CBC (cannabichromene). Each has a distinct mechanism of action and contributes differently to hemp extract's effects. In PureCraft's broad-spectrumCBD Oil, trace concentrations of these minor cannabinoids are retained alongside CBD, contributing to the entourage effect.
CBD and CBG are structurally and mechanistically distinct cannabinoids. CBD works primarily through 5-HT1A serotonin receptors (anxiety), CB2 receptors (inflammation), TRPV1 (pain), and FAAH inhibition (sleep/mood). CBG works through α2-adrenergic receptors (intraocular pressure, autonomic regulation), CB1/CB2 partial agonism, and shows particularly strong effects in gut-specific CB2 applications (IBD research) and antibacterial activity. They are complementary rather than competitive — different mechanisms addressing different aspects of wellness. Both are present inCBD Oil's broad-spectrum formula.
CBN has mild CB1 receptor activity that supports slow-wave sleep architecture — the deep, restorative stage of sleep. The degree of sedation from CBN alone (without THC) is debated in the research literature: some studies suggest modest sedation, while others indicate CBN's sedating reputation derives partly from its historical co-occurrence with THC in aged cannabis. In PureCraft'sCBD+CBN Sleep Gummies, CBN is combined with CBD (HPA recalibration) and physiological-dose melatonin (circadian timing) to address multiple sleep mechanisms simultaneously. Most users report improved sleep depth and quality rather than acute sedation or grogginess.
THCV is a CB1 antagonist at low doses — producing the opposite of THC's appetite-stimulating effect by blocking CB1 rather than activating it. Research has demonstrated appetite suppression and improved insulin sensitivity in animal models. THCV may also have anxiolytic effects through CB1 antagonism. At higher doses, THCV reverses to CB1 agonism and can produce mild psychoactive effects. In broad-spectrum hemp products, THCV exists only in trace concentrations — contributing potential metabolic benefits without meaningful psychoactivity risk.
CBC (cannabichromene) works through TRPV1 and TRPA1 channels — not CB1/CB2 receptors — and also inhibits endocannabinoid reuptake, elevating circulating anandamide. Research applications include anti-inflammatory effects, neurogenesis support (relevant to depression research), and entourage amplification in combination with CBD. CBC is non-psychoactive regardless of dose. InCBD Oil's broad-spectrum formula, trace CBC contributes to the combined anti-inflammatory and neurogenic profile of the formula. SeeCBC: The Inflammation and Mood Cannabinoid Explained.
Delta-8 THC occupies a legally uncertain position. It is not explicitly scheduled federally in the United States, which some interpret as legal under the 2018 Farm Bill (which legalized hemp derivatives). However, at least 20 states have explicitly banned or restricted delta-8, the FDA has issued multiple warnings about delta-8 products, and the DEA has suggested delta-8 produced from CBD conversion should be classified as a controlled substance. The legal landscape is actively evolving. PureCraft does not use delta-8 in any product and recommends avoiding unregulated delta-8 products given the safety and legal uncertainty.
The entourage effect is the phenomenon where cannabinoids and terpenes produce greater therapeutic benefit in combination than in isolation. Proposed by Mechoulam and Ben-Shabat (1998) and elaborated by Russo (2011), the entourage effect explains why whole-plant broad-spectrum extracts — which retain minor cannabinoids and terpenes alongside CBD — often outperform CBD isolate at equivalent milligram doses. The mechanism involves synergistic receptor interactions, enzyme competition, and downstream signaling that isolated compounds cannot replicate.Full-Spectrum vs Broad-Spectrum vs CBD Isolate: The Complete Guidecovers the full-spectrum vs broad-spectrum vs isolate comparison, including the drug testing implications.
The hemp plant produces over 100 identified cannabinoids, though the vast majority exist in concentrations too low to have meaningful pharmacological relevance at typical product use levels. The cannabinoids with the most research attention and commercial relevance are CBD, CBG, CBN, THCV, CBC, delta-8 THC, and delta-9 THC. Dozens of other cannabinoids — CBDV, CBGV, CBDVA, CBL, and others — have been identified but remain poorly characterized in terms of human pharmacology.
It depends on the extraction process and whether the manufacturer filters the extract. PureCraft's broad-spectrumCBD Oil retains the natural minor cannabinoid profile of the hemp plant — including trace CBG, CBN, and CBC — which is verified on the batch-specificbatch-tested COA accessible atpurecraftcbd.com/pages/faq. Not all broad-spectrum products retain these minor cannabinoids; some manufacturers filter them out or use CBD isolate blended back into a carrier oil, which would not contain CBG or CBN. The COA is the only reliable way to verify what a product actually contains.
Different cannabinoids address different sleep mechanisms. CBD (via HPA recalibration and FAAH inhibition) addresses cortisol and anxiety-driven sleep disruption — the most common mechanism of modern insomnia. CBN (via mild CB1 activation) supports slow-wave sleep architecture depth. Physiological-dose melatonin signals circadian timing. PureCraft'sCBD+CBN Sleep Gummies combine all three to address the full sleep problem: CBD for the cortisol-anxiety component, CBN for slow-wave depth, and physiological-dose melatonin for circadian timing. No single cannabinoid addresses all three mechanisms — the combination is the most complete sleep protocol.
CBD has the strongest and broadest anti-inflammatory evidence, working through CB2 receptor activation that modulates cytokine production in peripheral immune tissue, joint synovium, skin, and gut. CBG adds gut-specific CB2 anti-inflammatory effects (particularly relevant for IBD) and direct antibacterial activity. CBC contributes through TRPV1/TRPA1 and endocannabinoid reuptake inhibition, which elevates anandamide's CB2 anti-inflammatory activity. Beta-caryophyllene adds direct CB2 agonism as a terpene. In PureCraft's broad-spectrumCBD Oil, all of these mechanisms operate simultaneously — this is the strongest argument for broad-spectrum over isolate for anti-inflammatory applications.
CBD Oil is a broad-spectrum hemp extract containing: CBD (primary ingredient at verified label-claim potency), trace CBG, trace CBN, trace CBC, trace THCV (possible in broad-spectrum), and hemp terpenes including beta-caryophyllene, linalool, myrcene, limonene, and others. The product contains 0.00% THC — no delta-8, no delta-9 — verified on every batch by an ISO-accredited third-party laboratory. The full cannabinoid panel is listed on the batch-specificbatch-tested COA atpurecraftcbd.com/pages/faq.
The CBD market has spent years fixating on milligrams. How many milligrams per serving? Per bottle? The cannabinoid profile matters as much as the concentration — because CBG, CBN, CBC, and terpenes are not marketing buzzwords. They are pharmacologically distinct compounds with documented mechanisms that contribute materially to what a broad-spectrum product does in the body.
Understanding the cannabinoid profile helps you make better product decisions, set accurate expectations, and understand whyCBD Oil (broad-spectrum, nano-optimized, zero-THC, minor cannabinoids retained) performs differently from an isolate product at the same milligram dose. The entourage effect is real. The minor cannabinoids are real. And the COA that verifies what's actually in each batch is the only reliable way to know what you're actually consuming.
Explore the dedicated deep dives:CBG: What Is It and What Does the Research Show? |CBN for Sleep: The Science Behind the Sleepy Cannabinoid |THCV: What Is It and What Does the Research Show? |CBC: The Inflammation and Mood Cannabinoid Explained |Delta-8 THC vs CBD: What's the Difference and Which Is Safer? |Terpenes and CBD: How Hemp Terpenes Enhance the Entourage Effect.PureCraft CBD Oil 1000mg — nano-optimized, broad-spectrum, 0.00% THC,batch-tested COA.browse all PureCraft CBD products.
Medical Disclaimer | This article is for informational and educational purposes only. Cannabinoid supplements are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease or medical condition. PureCraft CBD products are not FDA-evaluated for medical use. Individual results may vary. Consult a qualified healthcare provider before beginning any new supplement regimen.
•CBG: What Is It and What Does the Research Show?
•CBN for Sleep: The Science Behind the Sleepy Cannabinoid
•THCV: What Is It and What Does the Research Show?
•CBC: The Inflammation and Mood Cannabinoid Explained
•Delta-8 THC vs CBD: What's the Difference and Which Is Safer?
•Terpenes and CBD: How Hemp Terpenes Enhance the Entourage Effect
•Full-Spectrum vs Broad-Spectrum vs CBD Isolate: The Complete Guide
•How CBD Is Made: From Hemp Plant to Finished Product
•Nano CBD vs Regular CBD: What's the Difference and Does It Matter?
•CBD and Drug Testing: Will CBD Show Up on a Drug Test?
•How to Read a CBD Certificate of Analysis (COA): A Step-by-Step Guide
•What Is the Endocannabinoid System? A Complete Guide
•How the Endocannabinoid System Regulates Your Body: A Deep Dive
•What Makes a Good CBD Brand? 10 Things to Look For
•CBD Dosage Guide: How to Find the Right Dose for Your Body and Goals
•Gertsch et al. (2008): Beta-caryophyllene is a dietary cannabinoid — PNAS → PubMed 18574571
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