Pubdate: Thu, 02 Aug 2012 Source: Daily Comet (Thibodaux, LA) Copyright: 2012 Comet-Press Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.dailycomet.com/article/99999999/SERVICES/100519642 Website: http://dailycomet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1505 Author: Xerxes A. Wilson SYNTHETIC POT IS A LEGITIMATE HEALTH CONCERN, DOCTORS SAY Depression, delusions and hallucinations tied to the use of synthetic marijuana are giving a whole new meaning to the term "reefer madness," law enforcement officers and physicians said. "You can call it what you want -- Russian roulette, roll of the dice. People just do not know what is in it," said Mark Ryan, director of the Louisiana Poison Center, "It is highly dangerous." There have been numerous raids across Louisiana targeting the sale and manufacturing of so-called synthetic marijuana with the Terrebonne Sheriff's Office recently getting in on the action. Narcotics agents for the Sheriff's Office searched the Hippie Hole and Herbal Connexxion in Houma last week. They said their search turned up brightly colored packets labeled as "Burst Aeromatics" and "Super Aroma." All these packets include the phrase "not for human consumption." Both the Hippie Hole and Herbal Connexxion had more than 800 ready-to-sell packs, which go for between $30 and $40, said Darryl Stewart, an assistant supervisor with the Terrebonne Parish Narcotics Task Force. During the search, law enforcement officials said they also found evidence Herbal Connexxion was making its own synthetic marijuana with 12,000 individual packets labeled and ready to be filled with the drug. Stewart said police also found receipts indicating other materials for the manufacturing of the product had been purchased. The basic manufacturing requirements of these substances make it highly attractive for those looking to make a quick buck with little investment, Stewart said. Stewart said the drug starts as the manufacturers' choice of easily smokable plant material, which is then sprayed with chemicals typically purchased from overseas. The spraying equipment, packaging, plant materials and chemicals involved in filling those 12,000 packets at Herbal Connexxion would have cost the manufacturer less than $5,000, officials said. The product could have then been sold for about $360,000. "It's the false assumption that they are legal," Stewart said of why these drugs are popular. "People see them in the stores and near candy bars and drinks, as opposed to finding it on a shadowy street corner. You can walk into a business for it." All the packs are typically marketed as incense, although their names or slogans often make reference to drug culture. Forms of synthetic marijuana were first banned by the Louisiana Legislature in 2010. This set off a game of chemical cat and mouse with law enforcement as the manufacturers of them continually changed the formula to avoid arrest. A law passed in 2011 broadened the scope of the banned substances, but Stewart said law enforcement is still left chasing crafty chemists. "Law enforcement is always going to be behind it because they can just change it slightly and get around the law," Stewart said. The investigation into the two Houma businesses has been going on for about six months, and it included law enforcement buying the products and sending them to a lab to be chemically examined for illegal substances, officials said. As evidence of law enforcement's uphill climb, Stewart said they have purchased synthetic marijuana from other places only to have it yield no illegal substances. Lafourche Parish Sheriff's office spokesman Brennan Matherne said his department is going through the same issues with manufacturers staying ahead of the law. "If the product doesn't come up as illegal, there is nothing we can do about it," Stewart said. The name synthetic marijuana is actually misleading because while the drug may mimic some of the effects of the traditional drug, it's really just a chemical compound added to a random plant material, Ryan said. "We don't see people come in with marijuana overdoses. They don't show up in the emergency room. These people (using synthetic drugs) do," Ryan said. Ryan said the substances used to give synthetic marijuana its intoxicating properties were traditionally researched for potentially therapeutic uses but were not approved by Federal Drug Administration and haven't been tested on humans. Then there is the constant manipulation of the chemical structures of these substances to skirt the law that adds to the unpredictability of the effects. "You can test a product one day, you get one thing, and you test it the next day, and you get something completely different," Ryan said. Ryan also noted the crude manufacturing practices mean the potency of a single use of synthetic marijuana could vary widely. Hospital officials for Terrebonne and Lafourche parishes said the past two years have seen a serious upswing in the abuse of these particular types of drugs primarily because of their easy accessibility. "It is a wide range of symptoms we've seen," said Ryan Wolfort, the Emergency Room director at Ochsner St. Anne General Hospital in Raceland. (We've seen) psychiatric symptoms, a wide variety of psychosis. We can also see metabolic issues -- heart palpitations along with other heart and kidney issues." Wolfort said the psychiatric symptoms include delusions like people thinking they are being followed and hallucinations where people see something that clearly isn't there. "There have been some cases that have been long-lasting with tragic outcomes," said Dr. Thomas Falterman, the Emergency Room director at the Leonard J. Chabert Medical Center in Houma. "Some people develop long-lasting effects including major depression, and some patients can truly become suicidal when prior to using that substance had no such features." Wolfort said in some cases the psychiatric damage can be irreparable. Devin Verrett, responding to a question on houmatoday.com's Facebook page, blames the synthetic drug's rise on the nation's reluctance to legalize real marijuana. "It's a shame citizens are faced with the dangers of synthetic marijuana because our government is too backwards to recognize and endorse the real medical benefits of natural marijuana," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt