Pubdate: Sun, 01 Aug 2010 Source: Olympian, The (WA) Copyright: 2010 The Olympian Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/51PidAHv Website: http://www.theolympian.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/319 Author: Jeremy Pawloski POT SUBSTITUTES LACK CONTROLS Legal: Health Effects Of Products Untested Herbal blends such as the one that put a Tumwater teen in the emergency room after he smoked it last week include synthetic marijuana compounds that are legal but have never been approved for human consumption, according to a pharmacologist who uses them in research. "There've been no controlled clinical trials to tell us how dangerous they are in humans," Steve Childers, a pharmacology professor at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center in North Carolina, said of the compounds, which mostly are legal. "We don't know enough about the human pharmacological effects of these substances. Anybody with any brains wouldn't use them." Childers conducts medical research with the same sort of synthetic cannabinoids that the teen had smoked. The cannabinoids are in herbal blends with names such as Spice, K2, Freedom and Genie that are sold in smoke shops nationwide and on the Internet. Childers said the synthetic compounds have great value in helping scientists to come up with new medical treatments and better understand how marijuana's active ingredient, THC, affects the brain. The compounds have been invented in the past 15 years or so, and for the most part there are no legal restrictions on their possession or sale, Childers said. One doctor said Wednesday that they are about five times as strong as regular marijuana. Childers said they are never used on humans in research labs because of health risks. But the science that explains the chemistry that goes into making synthetic cannabinoids is widely published and available in the public domain, he said. And entrepreneurs with a background in chemistry looking to make a buck are manufacturing, marketing and selling the substances as legal marijuana substitutes. The substances are typically labeled with the words "not for human consumption" or are sold as incense or potpourri. But Dr. Thomas Martin, associate medical director of the Washington Poison Center, said people who sell the synthetic marijuana are intentionally vague about its use. Manufacturers that sell the herbal blends of synthetic cannabinoids are aware of their psychoactive properties and that they will be bought and smoked by people who want to get high, he said. CAUSE AND EFFECT As the popularity of synthetic marijuana grows, so does the number of people in Washington who are getting sick after smoking it, said Jim Williams, executive director of the Washington Poison Center. In 2009, state hospitals reported admitting seven people for treatment after they had smoked synthetic marijuana blends, Williams said. In 2010, 29 people have been admitted to state hospitals for the same reason, he said. Martin said that increase is only "the tip of the iceberg," and many other incidents involving people having adverse reactions after smoking synthetic marijuana go unreported. He said he has heard anecdotal reports of other such incidents on listservs used by doctors in Western Washington. "It's certainly taking off in Seattle," Martin said of recreational use of synthetic marijuana. Nationwide, in 2009 there were 13 reports to poison centers related to the use of synthetic marijuana, according to the American Association of Poison Control Centers. There have been 761 such calls nationwide through July 23 this year, according to the AAPCC. A week later, that number had jumped to 843, according to an AAPCC spokeswoman. Typical health problems reported by people who have adverse reactions include heart palpitations, delusions, panic attacks, hallucinations, nausea, tremors and high blood pressure. In June, a teenager in Iowa underwent an extreme panic attack, then shot himself after smoking an herbal blend of synthetic marijuana sold in smoke shops, according to a law enforcement briefing from the Office of National Drug Control Policy. The Iowa Legislature subsequently banned the products, said Karmen Hanson, an analyst for the National Conference of State Legislatures, which provides research for the legislators and staffs of every state and territory. Bans of synthetic marijuana have been passed in nine other states: Kansas, Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, Tennessee and North Dakota, Hanson said. 'HE COULD HAVE DIED' The Tumwater 17-year-old's experience speaks to the dangers of synthetic marijuana. He was admitted to Providence St. Peter Hospital with muscle contractions, low blood pressure and a heart rate of 170 beats per minute, said his emergency room physician, Joe Pellicer. "He could have died," Pellicer said Monday. The teen's mother, Jhanna Parker, said her son's 18-year-old friend bought the herbal blend, called Freedom Spice, at Fire & Earth, a smoke shop on Fourth Avenue in Olympia. She said that because the product is legal, her son didn't think it would hurt him. A toxicology screen didn't turn up any illegal drugs or intoxicants in the teen's system, Pellicer has said. Sarah Schwarz, the owner of Fire & Earth, said Monday that she will no longer sell any herbal spice products, and she pulled the Freedom Spice brand from her shelves after a phone call from Parker that day. SUPPORT FOR A BAN Childers and Martin agree that the government should prohibit the sale of herbal spice products mixed with synthetic cannabinoids. People who buy a legal herbal blend containing synthetic cannabinoids don't know exactly what they are getting or its quality because the sale of such products is not regulated, Childers said. "It's a new drug," he said. Childers said he does not advocate anyone smoking marijuana but acknowledged that it's safer than smoking synthetic marijuana. The synthetic version is stronger because it is designed in labs as "full agonists," meaning it binds more powerfully with the brain's receptors, making it easier for scientists to study its effects. Also, scientists have studied the health effects of smoking regular marijuana for years, providing an extensive body of knowledge. One of the organizers of Seattle Hempfest 2010 spoke out about synthetic cannabinoids in an e-mail to The Olympian. "Nature has provided us with cannabis; a relatively benign natural substance that has never killed a single person from toxic reaction or overdose," reads the e-mail from Vivian McPeak, president of the nonprofit organization that is putting on Seattle Hempfest. "It boggles the mind to think of why anyone would prefer to use a potentially toxic, highly concentrated chemical version in its place." The federal Drug Enforcement Administration is researching the herbal products for sale that contain synthetic marijuana, DEA spokesman Rusty Payne said Tuesday. It is a long and involved process to prohibit the sale or possession of a drug under the Controlled Substances Act, he said. First, studies must be conducted to determine a drug's potential for abuse, as well as whether it is addictive or causes health problems, he said. The medical community and other federal agencies, including the Department of Health and Human Services and the Food and Drug Administration, all must be consulted, he said. And the results have to stand up in court. According to the DEA's website, proceedings to add a drug or other substance to the list of controlled substances must be initiated by the DEA, the HHS, or "by petition from any interested person." The DEA begins its investigation after it receives a petition; Payne said Tuesday that an investigation has been initiated. "We're very much looking into it," he said, although he could give no timetable. Payne noted that Congress can bypass the process by passing legislation to prohibit the possession or sale of a drug. He cautioned that the DEA takes no position on whether Congress should take action with regard to synthetic cannabinoids but added that they are dangerous and should be avoided. Reports of the health concerns posed by the herbal smoking blends are attracting the attention of Congress. On Wednesday, a staffer for U.S. Sen. George LeMieux, R-Fla., forwarded The Olympian a copy of a letter the senator had sent that day to the heads of the DEA and HHS. In the letter, LeMieux states, "In light of the surge in adverse reports associated with the use of these products, efforts by multiple states to ban its sale and an overall lack of information regarding the extent of use and illicit distribution, expedited analysis by DEA and HHS is warranted." Dr. Alvin C. Bronstein, the acting director of toxicosurveillance for the AAPCC, states in a news release: "Statistics from (the National Poison Data System) show that this is an emerging phenomenon. The symptoms can be life-threatening." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart