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Ploug Dreier posted an update 2 years, 1 month ago
K2 and Spice are just two of the numerous trade names or
brands for synthetic designer drugs which are intended
to mimic THC, the main psychoactive ingredient of
marijuana. These designer synthetic drugs are from
the synthetic cannabinoid class of drugs which are often
marketed and sold under the guise of ?herbal incense?
or ?potpourri.?
Synthetic cannabinoids aren’t organic, but are
chemical substances created in a laboratory. Since
2009, law enforcement has encountered a huge selection of
different synthetic cannabinoids which are being sold as
?legal? alternatives to marijuana. The products are
being abused for his or her psychoactive properties and so are
packaged without information concerning their health and
safety risks.
Synthetic cannabinoids are sold at small
convenience stores, head shops, gas stations, and
via the web from both domestic and international
sources. The products are labeled ?not for
human consumption? so that they can shield the
manufacturers, distributors, and retail sellers from
criminal prosecution. This sort of marketing is nothing
more than a methods to make dangerous, psychoactive
substances accessible to the public.
WHAT’S ITS ORIGIN?
Almost all synthetic cannabinoids are
manufactured in Asia without manufacturing
requirements or quality control standards. The bulk
powdered chemical is smuggled in to the United States
typically as misbranded imports and also have no legitimate
medical or industrial use.
What are common street names?
There are numerous street names of synthetic
cannabinoids as drug manufacturers try to appeal to
and entice youth and young adults by labeling these
products with exotic and extravagant packaging.
Some of the many street names of K2/Spice synthetic
marijuana are:
? ?Spice, K2, Blaze, RedX Dawn, Paradise, Demon,
Black Magic, Spike, Mr. Nice Guy, Ninja, Zohai,
Dream, Genie, Sence, Smoke, Skunk, Serenity,
Yucatan, Fire, Skooby Snax, and Crazy Clown.
What does it appear to be?
These chemical compounds are generally found in
bulk powder form, and dissolved in solvents, such
as acetone, before being put on dry plant material
to make the ?herbal incense? products. After local
distributors apply the drug to the dry plant material, they
package it for retail distribution. As the products have
no accepted medical use, this process is done without
pharmaceutical-grade chemical purity standards, or any
concern for the user. It ignores any control mechanisms
that would serve to ensure a uniform concentration of
the powerful and dangerous drugs contained in each
package. The disregard for the public?s safety and
often encountered ?hot spots? in the drug packaging can
create a user ingesting an extremely concentrated portion
of the drugs without their knowledge, often leading to
serious adverse health effects. The bulk powder can
also be dissolved in solution designed to be used in
e-cigarette or other vaping devices.
K2/Spice
K2/Spice
Department of Justice/Drug Enforcement Administration
Drug Fact Sheet
How is it abused?
Spraying or mixing the synthetic cannabinoids on
plant material provides a vehicle for the most frequent
route of administration – smoking (utilizing a pipe, a
water pipe, or rolling the drug-laced plant material
in cigarette papers). As well as the cannabinoids
laced on plant material and sold as potpourri and
incense, liquid cannabinoids have been designed to
be vaporized through both disposable and reusable
electronic cigarettes.
What exactly are its overdose effects?
Severe adverse effects have been attributed to the
abuse of synthetic cannabinoids, including nausea,
vomiting, agitation, anxiety, seizures, stroke, coma,
and death by coronary attack or organ failure. Acute
kidney injury requiring hospitalization and dialysis in
several patients reportedly having smoked synthetic
cannabinoids in addition has been reported by the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention.
Which drugs cause similar effects?
Synthetic cannabinoids are marketed alternatively
to THC, the main psychoactive constituent of
marijuana, however they are much more potent and
have been shown to cause side effects which are more
severe than those reported from THC.
What is its influence on the mind?
Acute psychotic episodes, dependence, and
withdrawal are connected with use of these synthetic
cannabinoids. A lot of people have suffered from
intense hallucinations. Other effects include severe
agitation, disorganized thoughts, paranoid delusions,
and violence after smoking products laced with one of these
substances.
What is its influence on the body?
State public health insurance and poison centers have issued
warnings in response to adverse health effects
connected with abuse of herbal incense products
containing these synthetic cannabinoids. These
undesireable effects included tachycardia (elevated heart
rate), elevated blood pressure, unconsciousness,
tremors, seizures, vomiting, hallucinations, agitation,
anxiety, pallor, numbness, and tingling. That is in
addition to the numerous public health and poison
centers that have similarly issued warnings
regarding the abuse of these synthetic cannabinoids.
Occasionally, K2 SPICE can
be long-lasting even after the user quits using the
substances.
What’s its legal status in the usa?
These substances haven’t any accepted medical use in
the United States and also have been reported to produce
adverse health effects. Currently, 43 substances are
specifically listed as Schedule I substances beneath the
Controlled Substances Act either through legislation
or regulatory action. You can also get many
other synthetic cannabinoids that meet up with the definition
for ?cannabimimetic agent? under the Controlled
Substances Act and thus are Schedule I substances.
There are lots of synthetic cannabinoid substances
that are for sale as ?incense,? ?potpourri,? and other
products that are not controlled substances. However,
synthetic cannabinoids may be subject to prosecution
under the Controlled Substance Analogue Enforcement