Skip to content

Cart

Your cart is empty

The Entourage Effect

Where the Idea Comes From

The term "entourage effect" was introduced by cannabis researcher Dr. Raphael Mechoulam in the late 1990s to describe something his team observed: that compounds in cannabis seemed to influence each other's activity in ways no single molecule could explain alone. The idea was expanded to describe the broader interaction between cannabinoids, terpenes, and other plant compounds — the premise being that the whole behaves differently than the sum of its parts.

What the Research Shows

Research published in Biomedicines notes that evidence for cannabinoid-to-cannabinoid interactions — particularly between CBD and CBG — has been reported across multiple research groups. The theory remains an active area of study. What's clear is that multi-compound cannabinoid profiles are producing research outcomes distinct from isolated compounds.

Terpenes add another layer. Beyond their role in scent, terpenes are increasingly studied as functional molecules that may interact with cannabinoids and modulate the overall experience of a formula.

Why It Shapes Everything Midori Does

The entourage effect isn't settled science — but it is a well-grounded hypothesis supported by a growing body of research and by the broader logic of botanical medicine. Plants rarely deliver their character through a single compound. Midori's multi-cannabinoid approach, layered with intentional terpene profiles, reflects this thinking — built with precision rather than left to chance.

These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

Need help?

Frequently Asked Questions

Understanding Our Extracts

Our Cannabinoids

Our Products & Formulations

Dosing & How to Use

Safety & Testing