Pubdate: Sun, 13 Apr 2014 Source: Denver Post (CO) Page: 1D Copyright: 2014 The Denver Post Corp Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122 Author: Marshall Allen, ProPublica THE REAL DANGERS OF MARIJUANA EDIBLES I walked through clouds of marijuana smoke on a recent Friday night to get to a Denver Nuggets basketball game. The sweet smell lingering in the air reminded me less of a family event and more of the time I saw AC/DC on "The Razor's Edge" tour at the old McNichols Sports Arena. I grew up in Colorado, but it had been a while since I lived in the state. I've never tried pot, but I graduated from the University of Colorado at Boulder, which is famous for its annual 4/20 public pot parties. But I saw more public pot use in my two-day visit to Lower Downtown Denver than in years spent in Boulder. Anyone over 21 can walk into a dispensary and load up on bud, marijuana baked goods and candy. The presence of legal pot right outside our hotel made people giddy at the conference I attended- a meeting of the Association of Health Care Journalists. At a reception, one woman passed a friend gummy bears infused with THC, or tetrahydrocannabinol, the main psychoactive ingredient in pot. And a friend at the conference - I'll call him Dude because he shared his story on condition I didn't name him-had a bad reaction after eating too many marijuana gummy bears. There's a running debate about whether pot should be legal for recreational use, but the Colorado experiment is rapidly unfolding, and it could help determine whether other states follow or shy away. Two things stand out after my visit. First, legal pot is attracting new and possibly naive users-creating risks that some don't bargain for. Second, the public health system's desire to protect people may be well-intentioned, but regulation and efforts to track the health effects have a way to go. The Dude gets high Dude had only smoked pot twice in his life, about 25 years ago, but he got curious and tried some pot gummy bears from the LoDoWellness Center. Other than being infused with THC, they looked and tasted like ordinary candy. Dude and a buddy paid $20 for a pack of 10. Dude ate a gummy bear before dinner but felt nothing. So he popped another during the meal. Nada. Ripoff, he assumed. So he ate a few more-five total, he said - but still felt nothing. He fell asleep in his hotel room at 11 p.m. Two hours later, Dude awoke feeling like he was on a roller coaster. His entire body tingled, and he was light-headed. He tried to stand, but his left leg was so numb he couldn't walk to the bathroom. His pounding heart strained his rib cage as waves of euphoria and anxiety washed over him. He was terrified. Was this the high? An overdose? A heart attack? A stroke? Totally debilitated, Dude thought about calling an ambulance but feared ending up in the ER or a police station. So he stayed put, guzzled water, pulled a blanket over his head and clutched a pillow. The symptoms lasted two hours, but he said it took a full day to feel normal again. Dude's experience and the open pot use I saw made me wonder about the public health aspect of legalization. The foods with pot - typically baked goods but also sodas, candies and even lasagna and pizza-cause the most unpredictable highs because the effects aren't immediate and potency varies, I learned. In the case of gummy bears, one is considered a single serving. Haley Andrews, manager of the LoDoWellness Center, said about half the shop's customers are marijuana novices, so the staff takes time to educate every customer. Users should start with one 10-milligram gummy bear, she said, and never consume more than 20 milligrams at a time. Andrews said the gummy bear bottle's label listed the number of 10 milligrams servings inside and advises users to consume with caution because the product had not been tested for contaminants or potency. There is no mention of a delayed response, she said. The Denver Post recently tested edibles and found that potency labeling was often inaccurate. Plus, labels are often ignored. Dude said his buddy held on to the package so he never looked at it. He claims no one at the shop gave him any warnings about the dosage. There were signs in the shop about how the different strains of pot would make users feel- "calm" or "excited"- but Dude said he saw no displays with advice for novice users, how many gummy bears are too many, or warnings about a delayed response. Andrews said the staff makes every effort to ensure people use the products safely, but that it's possible Dude somehow slipped through the cracks. Generally, using too much pot isn't life-threatening. But a reaction like Dude's could contribute to a heart attack or stroke for someone who has health problems, said Dr. Tista Ghosh of the Colorado Department of Public Health. She said recreational pot has been unexpectedly popular with the older crowd. "There's a lot we don't know," Ghosh said. "I feel like in some ways we're like tobacco 50 years ago. More research needs to be done on this from the public health and individual health perspective." Dude later said he was glad to be in his hotel room when the reaction hit him and not in a place where he could endanger others. Pot use has contributed to car crashes and the recent death of a Wyoming college student who jumped from a fourth floor hotel balcony. Children are especially at risk. It's illegal to make candy or fruit flavored cigarettes in the U.S., but pot candies and cookies in Colorado have been some of the best-selling products. Although the packaging is childproof, it doesn't stop kids once it's open. Dr. Andrew Monte, a toxicologist at the University of Colorado Medical School and Rocky Mountain Poison and Drug Center, estimated that there is a poison control call every few days about a child accidentally eating marijuana products. There also are reports from emergency room doctors, though no official numbers yet, of children showing up to hospitals in extreme states of drowsiness after accidentally consuming THC products, Monte said. "What kid doesn't want a brownie or a gummy bear?" Monte said. So far, there are no mandatory tests of the potency or purity of recreational pot or THC food products, but they are scheduled to roll out in the coming months under the rules to implement the new law. The process is more complicated than it would be in other cases because state regulators have not been able to rely on federal health agencies. The federal government deems marijuana an illegal substance, so it's not participating in the oversight, Ghosh said. Ghosh said the Colorado regulators have had to start some things from scratch, including finding labs that can be certified to test pot products. Michael Elliott, executive director of the Marijuana Industry Group- which represents marijuana centers, growers, and manufacturers of infused products in Colorado-said there are clean kitchen standards in place now, as well as licensing of facilities, financial disclosures, security and more. The industry, he said, is committed to robust regulation. Yet Elliott, Ghosh and Monte agree that more needs to be done to educate consumers. The state has put up a website with information about the law and advice for parents, and is running a "Drive High, Get a DUI" campaign, efforts that Elliott says are supported by the marijuana industry. Included on the website is a page titled "Using Too Much?" aimed at people like Dude. Public health also depends on people using common sense. Dude is a smart guy, but he knows he was a dumb consumer when he gobbled the pot gummy bears. Now, he regrets assuming that because marijuana was legal, nothing could go wrong. "I was ignorant about the whole thing," he told me later. "I am embarrassed to admit that I just ate the gummy bears because it seemed like fun. "It was not." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D