Monday, October 7, 2013

Spiced: Synthetic Cannabis Keeps Getting Stronger


Case reports of seizures in Germany from 2008 to 2011.

I wish I could stop writing blog posts about Spice, as the family of synthetic cannabinoids has become known. I wish young people would stop taking these drugs, and stick to genuine marijuana, which is far safer. I wish that politicians and proponents of the Drug War would lean in a bit and help, by knocking off the testing for marijuana in most circumstances, so the difficulty of detecting Spice products isn’t a significant factor in their favor. I wish synthetic cannabinoids weren’t research chemicals, untested for safety in humans, so that I could avoid having to sound like an alarmist geek on the topic.  I wish I didn’t have to discuss the clinical toxicity of more powerful synthetic cannabinoids like JWH-122 and JWH-210. I wish talented chemists didn’t have to spend precious time and lab resources laboriously characterizing the various metabolic pathways of these drugs, in an effort to understand their clinical consequences. I wish Spice drugs didn’t make regular cannabis look so good by comparison, and serve as an argument in favor of more widespread legalization of organic marijuana.

A German study, published in Addiction, seems to demonstrate that “from 2008 to 2011 a shift to the extremely potent synthetic cannabinoids JWH-122 and JWH-210 occurred…. Symptoms were mostly similar to adverse effects after high-dose cannabis. However, agitation, seizures, hypertension, emesis, and hypokalemia  [low blood potassium] also occurred—symptoms which are usually not seen even after high doses of cannabis.”

The German patients in the study were located through the Poison Information Center, and toxicological analysis was performed in the Institute of Forensic Medicine at the University Medical Center Freiburg. Only two study subjects had appreciable levels of actual THC in their blood. Alcohol and other confounders were factored out. First-time consumers were at elevated risk for unintended overdose consequences, since tolerance to Spice drug side effects does develop, as it does with marijuana.

Clinically, the common symptom was tachycardia, with hearts rates as high as 170 beats per minute. Blurred vision, hallucinations and agitation were also reported, but this cluster of symptoms is also seen in high-dose THC cases that turn up in emergency rooms. The same with nausea, the most common gastrointestinal complaint logged by the researchers.

But in 29 patients in whom the presence of synthetic cannabinoids was verified, some of the symptoms seem unique to the Spice drugs. The synthetic cannabinoids caused, in at least one case, an epileptic seizure. Hypertension and low potassium were also seen more often with the synthetics. After the introduction of the more potent forms, JWH-122 and JWH-210, the symptom set expanded to include “generalized seizures, myocloni [muscle spasms] and muscle pain, elevation of creatine kinase and hypokalemia.” The researchers note that seizures induced by marijuana are almost unheard of. In fact, studies have shown that marijuana has anticonvulsive properties, one of the reason it is popular with cancer patients being treated with radiation therapy.

And there are literally hundreds of other synthetic cannabinoid chemicals waiting in the wings. What is going on? Two things. First, synthetic cannabinoids, unlike THC itself, are full agonists at CB1 receptors. THC is only a partial agonist. What this means is that, because of the greater affinity for cannabinoid receptors, synthetic cannabinoids are, in general, stronger than marijuana—strong enough, in fact, to be toxic, possibly even lethal. Secondly, CB1 receptors are everywhere in the brain and body. The human cannabinoid type-1 receptor is one of the most abundant receptors in the central nervous system and is found in particularly high density in brain areas involving cognition and memory.

The Addiction paper by Maren Hermanns-Clausen and colleagues at the Freiburg University Medical Center in Germany is titled “Acute toxicity due to the confirmed consumption of synthetic cannabinoids,” and is worth quoting at some length:

The central nervous excitation with the symptoms agitation, panic attack, aggressiveness and seizure in our case series is remarkable, and may be typical for these novel synthetic cannabinoids. It is somewhat unlikely that co-consumption of amphetamine-like drugs was responsible for the excitation, because such co-consumption occurred in only two of our cases. The appearance of myocloni and generalized tonic-clonic seizures is worrying. These effects are also unexpected because phytocannabinoids [marijuana] show anticonvulsive actions in humans and in animal models of epilepsy.

The reason for all this may be related to the fact that low potassium was observed “in about one-third of the patients of our case series.” Low potassium levels in the blood can cause muscle spasms, abnormal heart rhythms, and other unpleasant side effects.

One happier possibility that arises from the research is that the fierce affinity of synthetic cannabinoids for CB1 receptors could be used against them. “A selective CB1 receptor antagonist,” Hermanns-Clausen and colleagues write, “for example rimonabant, would immediately reverse the acute toxic effects of the synthetic cannabinoids.”

The total number of cases in the study was low, and we can’t assume that everyone who smokes a Spice joint will suffer from epileptic seizures. But we can say that synthetic cannabinoids in the recreational drug market are becoming stronger, are appearing in ever more baffling combinations, and have made the matter of not taking too much a central issue, unlike marijuana, where taking too much leads to nausea, overeating, and sleep.

(See my post “Spiceophrenia” for a discussion of the less-compelling evidence for synthetic cannabinoids and psychosis).

Hermanns-Clausen M., Kneisel S., Hutter M., Szabo B. & Auwärter V. (2013). Acute intoxication by synthetic cannabinoids - Four case reports, Drug Testing and Analysis,   n/a-n/a. DOI:

Graphics Credit: http://www.aacc.org/

8 comments:

Bobby Thompson said...

You are absolutely right. The stuff is getting more and more powerful as they are using new chemicals when the old ones are banned. It's bad enough that it is made in a bathtub or a cement mixer and the chemicals aren't being distributed enough which causes hot spots, but the chemicals are getting even more dangerous. Plus it's super-addictive.

Luckily, after 3 years of smoking the poison, I was able to quit and have been clean for a year. Unfortunately, not a lot of people are successful in quitting and some end up dying.

Great article, thanks for spreading the word about spice.

Danielle B said...

You make a very good point saying that it makes organic marijuana look a lot better. It is much safer then synthetic and does not have all the side effects that synthetic can cause. It is getting a lot more popular in the United States because it is available to purchase. It is very addictive and just as you metioned I have actually witnessed people have seizures because of this drug and it was a very scary and eye opening experience. As mentioned in the textbook that I use in my psychology class it talks about how most marijuana users do not develop a physical dependance for it. Unlike the synthetic which is very addictive and harmful. This was a very informational and insightful blog and hopefully will help spread the word on the dangers of synthetic.

Drew Regan said...

I have to piggy back on the previous posts by Bobby and Danielle--synthetic marijuana could have been an issue almost entirely avoided if there wasn't a blind-eye turned to natural marijuana. If you think of the legal "crutches" that the government has allowed to be sold (almost entirely because of tax money), primarily alcohol and tobacco...don't you think that marijuana would be something, that not only generates more tax revenue, but doesn't have debilitating characteristics associated with it?
It just seems silly to me that drugs that have PROVEN negative impacts on the body are allowed to be sold--actually encouraged via indirect television advertising, direct television advertising, and a slew of other media outputs, etc.--but a drug that is actually diagnosed in some states for effectively treating conditions and leaving no residual direct health impacts. Nice article post! I hope this epidemic of spice manufacturing comes to a swift end. THIS is a drug that should be illegal ABOVE ALL.

Gary Bucher said...

I've thought along similar lines--that marijuana looks like a godsend compared to these horrifying synthetic drugs. I can't remember when it was, but I remember that case of a guy who was doped up on many different drugs who ended up going cannibalistic. I don't remember specifics, but I'd say aggression is a definite side effect of these drugs!
Great story, and I'm on board with everyone here, let's keep on spreading awareness!

Unknown said...

a little sugar and spice makes everything nice..? right? wrong. i believe its safe to say synthetic cannabis was lab born because its organic cousin is outlawed by our impecable federal govt. these synthetic cannabinoids are also out-lawed; however, they can only do so, one compound at a time. each batch of spice produced is more potent than the one banned before it. what little is known about spice (bc there is no human testing or regulations) is that these synthetic cannabinoids create a physical dependence and many nasty side-effects like seizures and even death. the all natural, organic cousin, marijuana creates no physical dependency and has no debilitating side effects.
Ben Hill 2k13 - Merica

Chris McNabb said...

This has been quite an interesting turn of events, in recent times, regarding the (il)legality of marijuana. Being such a hot button issue for some of the older generations, I can see how there is hesitation to legalize marijuana until there has been an abundance of scientifically supporting conclusions in favor of doing so; however, the market door that opened up "in response" to closing the marijuana market (to the public) should have been slammed shut and locked permanently. I can't believe that we the people are allowing these synthetic chemicals to be distributed to the public!! Anyway, I hope that we are able to put a stop to ALL synthetic drugs; in the end, it comes down to getting enough people motivated to do something about this issue.

Mark Hudson said...

Quite an interesting article and many subsequent, thought-provoking comments that follow. I am on the same page as what everyone has said here--spice and other derived synthetic compounds are a nuisance and dangerous to the health of the public. It is unfortunate that those laws that help to separate slight variations of chemicals used in different compounds for safety purposes is the loophole that allows for these synthetics to exist by simply restructuring the target molecule. Hopefully, a blanket policy on chemical derivatives can be implemented to expedite the banning of each new chemical as it's released. Great article!

Jay Michaels said...

Thanks for this article and all of the comments. I recently quit smoking spice (well I have quit several times) but this time seems different. I read a bunch of different stories of people struggling with this stuff and it made me change.

i really appreciate that you are helping inform people on this disgusting poison!

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