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created 11 months ago | Tagged: |
Locke!
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The brewing controversy over the designer drug known as “bath salts” — which I covered in my previous and extremely popular post — is only the tip of the iceberg, say addiction specialists, who are seeing a sudden spike in overdoses and admissions for the designer drug known as Spice or K2 as well.
Just like “bath salts,” Spice/K2 contains recently synthesized chemicals. In this case they’re designed to mimic the active ingredient in marijuana, known as THC. And like “bath salts,” they’re widely sold in head shops and convenience stores, as well as online. While Spice has been around a bit longer than bath salts — experts say it first appeared in the U.S. in 2004 — the word didn’t go out on the dangers of the drug until a couple of years ago. The problem being that most people assumed that, as a copy of marijuana, spice couldn’t be that worrisome. But they were wrong.
Just what we need: A teen-friendly drug Like bath salts, those whose lives are falling apart due to Spice are most likely to be teens and young adults. The problem, experts say, starts with pot, which has become so common among teens that marijuana abuse is now more common than cigarette smoking among high school seniors. More than 21 percent of high school students interviewed for a survey by the Centers for Disease Control reported abusing marijuana in the month prior, while only 19 percent reported smoking cigarettes in the same period of time. Teens and twenty-somethings already fond of pot turn to Spice because it’s easy to get, they perceive it as legal, and because schools and sports teams don’t test for it. And it’s easy to use; you just smoke it in a pipe or joint, and some people even brew it up in a tea. What, exactly, is “Spice”? Known by a variety of names including Zohai, Genie, K3, Bliss, Nice, Black Mamba, Incense, and even fake weed, Spice is a mixture of plant leaves and stems that have been laced with synthetic chemicals. It’s sold in colorful three-ounce plastic pouches decorated with psychedelic designs. But the drug is not as fun and lighthearted as it appears. “No two packages of Spice have the exact same ingredients,” says Natalie, a counselor at the Canyon Treatment Center in Los Angeles. “And the effects are very unpredictable.” When tested, Spice has been found to contain a number of artificial chemical compounds, primarily those known as JWH-018, JWH-073 and HU-210. None of these chemicals are guaranteed safe for human consumption, hence the warnings (meant to be ignored) on the packages. Techinically a chemical fertilizer, JWH-18 can cause the negative effects of marijuana at much lower dosages, and JWH-073 is listed by the Drug Enforcement Administration as a chemical concern. Perhaps most worrisome: HU-210 has been found to be between 100 to 800 times more potent than THC, the main active chemical in marijuana.” But the list of synthetic psuedo-cannabinoids keeps growing, as underground chemists create new variations to keep ahead of the law. At last count, there were at least 1o others, including M-694, CP-47,497, and numerous other variations of JWH. It’s not legal; as of last year, the Drug Enforcement Agency made 5 of the most common chemicals used to make Spice illegal and numerous states have passed laws making it a controlled substance and subject to fines and/or jail time for possession or distribution. But that’s relatively recently, and meanwhile it remains absurdly easy to get your hands on. And while a new urine test for synthetic cannabinoids from Redwood Toxicology, a division of Alere, has recently entered the market (as well as forensic tests by NMS Labs and others), many hospitals, emergency rooms, treatment centers and police departments don’t yet have testing available to them.
What does a Spice high feel like? Not good, according to what users tell therapists and reports turning up on addiction blogs. Unlike weed, which in general causes relaxation and positive feelings, Spice causes: acute anxiety or paranoia panic attacks a feeling of alienation/disassociation from the world hallucinations constant coughing feelings of nausea or actual vomiting inability to hold a thought for longer than a few seconds irregular heart beat/palpitations loss of concentration psychotic episodes tremors or seizues. And Spice is now being blamed for numerous violent incidents and deaths, which so far have been reported primarily in local media. Here are a few of those sad stories: In Indiana, two men beat one man’s father to death with a baseball bat when he interfered as they were robbing him to get money for Spice. Also in Indiana, a 17-year-old was shot by his grandmother when he became violent due to Spice. In Sioux City, Iowa, Spice triggered a panic attack in a teenager who then shot and killed himself. A well-known Anderson University basketball player collapsed and died during a pre-season warmup after ingesting K2. But the reporting of Spice-related deaths and violence has been hampered by lack of knowledge and the inability to test for the chemicals. Is Spice addictive? The answer to this is controversial, but addiction experts say yes. The problem is that typically we don’t consider marijuana addictive, other than as a so-called gateway drug.

