Pubdate: Tue, 01 May 2012 Source: Morning Sun (Mt. Pleasant, MI) Copyright: 2012 Morning Sun Contact: http://www.themorningsun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3938 Author: Susan Field 'Spice' Makes You Crazy, Stupid SYNTHETIC MARIJUANA IS DANGEROUS, OFFICIALS SAY Deb Derry knows too many teens who have tried "spice" and regretted it. Derry, a counselor at Mt. Pleasant High School and Oasis Alternative High School, knows one student who smoked synthetic marijuana three to five times a week and went into a psychotic episode. Another student used the drug once and won't do it again. Still another smoked the legal drug that is labeled as incense or potpourri and not for human consumption, became addicted to the "bizarre" high and now needs to take Xanax, Ativan or another prescription drug to feel normal. That student overdosed on the prescription trying to "get down" from the high obtained by smoking spice. During a presentation at the Isabella County Trial Court, Derry told a group of students and parents that spice, a drug that appears to stay legal by manufacturers which slightly alter the chemical components as quickly as they are banned, that spice affects the frontal lobe of the human brain, which separates people from animals. Spice, which is available at convenience stores and gasoline stations, affects the frontal lobe, Derry said. Derry spoke of a fourth student, who started smoking synthetic marijuana about a month ago, who gave a sexual favor in exchange for $12 to get more of the drug. "Not a pleasant scenario," Derry said. During the presentation, a teen who was addicted to the drug spoke as well, telling students, parents, Judge William Ervin, Mt. Pleasant Police Youth Services Officer Dave Sabuda, a juvenile probation officer, an attorney and others that the high she got on synthetic marijuana "just brings you someplace else." "It's not a good trip," she said. "It's a bad hallucination." At one point, she said, she was looking at peoples' faces and they changed before her eyes. "I thought I was going to die," she said. "I thought I was in hell." Current research into the drug includes information about a case in Seattle in which a man murdered his girlfriend while high on synthetic marijuana, Derry said. Lawmakers are banning components used in making the drug, but manufacturers are replacing those substances with slightly different chemicals faster than the government can stop them, officials said. Compounds are changed just enough to get around the Food and Drug Administration, officials said. Five chemicals have been banned so far, officials said. But teens are still abusing the drug. One was at a birthday party, Derry said, and was persuaded by another to try synthetic marijuana. After smoking the drug, the teen fell into a "zombie" state, being unable to move, she said. However, that teen could hear perfectly, and listened to friends talk about being afraid to call for an ambulance. One friend reached into the teen's pocket and took money, Derry said. Another teen who was unable to move after smoking the drug recalled friends talking about how to get rid of her body , deciding to dispose of it in a river. Those friends did not realize that the teen was alive, Sabuda said. Derry said she knows three people with what is likely going to be permanent cognitive damage from smoking synthetic marijuana. Other users have describe the high as like being in a video game, Sabuda said. One case involved a man who thought he was in "Grand Theft Auto," he said. Paul Marsh, a juvenile probation officer in Isabella County, told students at the presentation that smoking synthetic marijuana is like being kicked in the head by a horse. Marsh also said he's seen users lose as many as 27 intelligence quotient points from fifth grade to ninth grade. "That can be the difference between becoming a doctor of changing tires," Marsh said. Sabuda said the drug is not regulated, is easily available and is "messing people up and there's nothing we can do about it." Ervin said synthetic marijuana is made up of toxic substances. "You don't know what you're putting in your body," he said, adding that the effects can be deadly if a user is taking another prescription drug while smoking, even if the prescription is legitimate. As a police officer, Sabuda said, he's seen it all. It's important for teens to know that they don't know how the drug will affect them. "You don't know what you're taking," he said. "The components change. "Our emergency room doesn't know what to do with an overdose." With other drugs, including heroin and cocaine, there are treatments, Sabuda said. Those who overdose or have bad reactions to synthetic marijuana can have body temperatures higher than 105 degrees, anxiety and rapid heart rate, Sabuda said. When someone overdoses, the worst thing to do is try to hide it, Sabuda said. "They need help, and you're probably going to get in trouble," he said. "Be smart. "Look out for your friends and acquaintances." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom