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New Studies Destroy the Last Objection to Medical Marijuana

E-llusion

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New research on "vaporization" has demonstrated that all those fears about the ill effects of smoking marijuana are 100 percent obsolete.

Anyone who advocates for medical marijuana sooner or later runs into arguments about smoking: "No real medicine is smoked." "Smoking is bad for the lungs; why would any doctor recommend something so harmful?" It's a line of reasoning that medical marijuana opponents have used to great effect in Congress, state legislatures, and elsewhere. Indeed, the FDA's controversial 2006 statement opposing medical marijuana was couched in repeated references to "smoked marijuana."

But new research demonstrates that all those fears of "smoked marijuana" as medicine are 100 percent obsolete.

The smoking argument was the closest thing to a scientifically meaningful objection to medical marijuana. While marijuana smoke, unlike tobacco, has never been shown to cause lung cancer, heavy marijuana smoking has been associated with assorted respiratory symptoms and a potentially increased risk of bronchitis. That's because burning any plant material produces a whole lot of substances such as tars, and carbon monoxide that are not good for the lungs.

Nevertheless, inhalation is clearly the best method for administering marijuana's active components, called cannabinoids. Cannabinoids such as THC are fat-soluble molecules that are absorbed slowly and unevenly when taken orally, as in the prescription THC pill Marinol. This means that Marinol typically takes an hour to two hours to work, and dose adjustment is nearly impossible. Patients often report that when it finally kicks in, it hits like a ton of bricks, leaving them too stoned to function.

For that reason, The Lancet Neurology noted a few years ago, "Smoking has been the route of choice for many cannabis users because it delivers a more rapid 'hit' and allows more accurate dose titration." Because the effect is nearly instantaneous, patients can simply take as many puffs as they need, stopping when they've achieved the needed effect without excessive intoxication.

So far, no pharmaceutical product -- not even Sativex, the much-touted marijuana spray now marketed in Canada -- achieves this combination of rapid action and simple, accurate dose adjustment.

Back in 1999, the Institute of Medicine's White House-commissioned report on medical marijuana conceded marijuana's medical benefits, saying that what is needed is "a nonsmoked rapid-onset cannabinoid drug delivery system."

The new studies -- one from the University of California, San Francisco, and the other from the University at Albany, State University of New York -- confirm that such a system is here. It's called vaporization, and has been familiar to medical marijuana patients for many years, but few outside the medical marijuana community know it exists. Unlike smoking, a vaporizer does not burn the plant material, but heats it just to the point at which the THC and the other cannabinoids vaporize. In the Volcano vaporizer tested at UCSF, the vapors are collected in a detachable plastic bag with a mouthpiece for inhalation.

The UCSF study, conducted by Dr. Donald Abrams and colleagues and just published online by the journal Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics (to appear in the journal's print edition on May) compared a commercially available vaporizer called the Volcano to smoking in 18 volunteers. The subjects inhaled three different strengths of marijuana either as smoked cigarettes or vaporized using the Volcano.

The researchers then measured the volunteers' plasma THC levels and the amount of expired carbon monoxide, which is considered a reliable marker for the unwanted combustion products contained in smoke.

The two methods produced similar THC levels, with vaporization producing somewhat higher levels, and were judged equally efficient for administration of cannabinoids. The big difference was in expired carbon monoxide. As expected, there was a sharp increase in carbon monoxide levels after smoking, while "little if any" increase was detected after vaporization. "This indicates little or no exposure to gaseous combustion toxins," the researchers wrote. "Vaporization of marijuana does not result in exposure to combustion gases, and therefore is expected to be much safer than smoking marijuana cigarettes."

A second study, by Dr. Mitch Earleywine at the University at Albany, State University of New York, involved an Internet survey of nearly 7,000 marijuana users. Participants were asked to identify their primary method of using marijuana (joints, pipe, vaporizer, edibles, etc.) and were asked six questions about respiratory symptoms. After adjusting for variables such as age and cigarette use, vaporizer users were 60 percent less likely than smokers to report respiratory symptoms such as cough, chest tightness or phlegm. The effect of vaporizer use was more pronounced the larger the amount of marijuana used.

"Our study clearly suggests that the respiratory effects of marijuana use can be decreased by use of a vaporizer," Earleywine commented. "In fact, because we only asked participants about their primary means of using marijuana, it's likely that people who exclusively use vaporizers will get even more benefit than our results indicate, because no doubt some in our study used vaporizers most of the time but not all of the time."

In a rational world, the government officials objecting to medical marijuana based on the health risks of smoking would greet this research with open arms. They would join with groups like the Marijuana Policy Project in spreading the word about this important, health-enhancing technology.

Don't hold your breath.

-----------------------------------------
New Studies Destroy the Last Objection to Medical Marijuana

By Bruce Mirken, AlterNet. Posted May 2, 2007.

http://www.alternet.org/drugreporter/51277/?page=1
 
Seriously though, the idea that taking smoke into the lungs is inherently bad is an ethnocentric viewpoint perpetuated by western society.

Smoke is medicine in and of itself.
 
lol all these advancements on marijuana and still cant get it medicinally legalized.. but NOOOO fentanyl and methylphenidate are ok not to mention any benzo
 
all we need is a major media outlet. when do you think thatll happen? drugs remain illegal because of the insane and really silly misconceptions people have about them
 
Hell yeah, i bought my vaporizer (silver surfer) because I noticed I had a smoker's cough and I don't smoke cigarettes. A week or so after I bought the vape, my cough went away. Total results.

I have also noticed that when I'm away and can't use it, i cough more and I'm phlegmier. it goes away when i switch back to the vape.

Vaporizers truly are the future. I wish I'd known about them when I lived in my dorm, they put off almost zero odor.
 
PsyGhost said:
Seriously though, the idea that taking smoke into the lungs is inherently bad is an ethnocentric viewpoint perpetuated by western society.

Smoke is medicine in and of itself.

yeah cause the idea that inhaling tar and carbon monoxide is harmful is nothing more than a fictitious product of the scientific worldview, right?

give me a break...
 
^+1

"Taking smoke into the lungs" is SO VERY FAR from being a "ethnocentric viewpoint perpetuated by western society". Maybe become LESS ethnocentric yourself and find out that MANY cultures around the world have smoked various plants for various reasons throughout time!
 
Smoke is bad medicine- the poison and the cure.

And qwe, do you really believe that misconceptions are at the root of illicit drugs current legal status?
"drugs remain illegal because of the insane
and really silly misconceptions people have about them"

It seems obvious to this guy, that the misconceptions are merely
massaged and encouraged by the business models profiting off the
illegality of natural substances. The misconceptions are there, but
they are merely a symptom, not the powerful cause.
 
I'd rather take iced, dry (no water) bong rips :D

then again, I cough up a lot of shit every morning and I don't smoke cigs 8)
 
It terrifies me when people mix shamanism with western medicine. There are many ways to treat the biology and Western medicine discounts some, but smoke is not a cure. When people burn sage they want the vaporized essentials oils anyways not the carbonized particulate.

PAX,
PL
 
Manifespo said:
Smoke is bad medicine- the poison and the cure.

And qwe, do you really believe that misconceptions are at the root of illicit drugs current legal status?
"drugs remain illegal because of the insane
and really silly misconceptions people have about them"

It seems obvious to this guy, that the misconceptions are merely
massaged and encouraged by the business models profiting off the
illegality of natural substances. The misconceptions are there, but
they are merely a symptom, not the powerful cause.
if you ask someone 'why do you think drugs should be illegal?' chances are you'll hear a string of extreme misconceptions about their addictiveness, toxicity, and psychological effects
 
The real winners of this study are the people who make volcano vaporizers. This is almost like scientifically endorsed viral marketing. Too bad that company isn't public.
 
I've been thinking of getting one. I have one concern and question for those who use them.

Do they still smell like smoked weed or cause another equally identifiable smell?
 
it causes a smell but not nearly as potent as if you smoked it. there wouldn't be any smell at all if you're careful about blowing the vapor out the window while taking your hits
 
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