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Filed: Country: Belarus
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It looks like incense but smells like trouble

ERs, parents see rise in strong reactions to use of pot substitute

By PEGGY O'HARE

HOUSTON CHRONICLE

Dec. 26, 2010, 7:27PM

The college students rush into the emergency room at Huntsville Memorial Hospital terribly sick, frightened, sweaty and not making any sense.

Dr. Matthew Messa, an emergency physician at the hospital, has seen at least 10 of these cases in the past two months, students reacting horribly to a seemingly harmless herbal incense.

But the students didn't get ill from the product's scent. They had dangerous reactions to legal substances — known on the streets by brand names such as K2, Spice and other catchy monikers — because they smoked them as a substitute for marijuana.

As the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration prepares to crack down on five ingredients used to make the substances — forms of a chemically sprayed herbal incense that can be purchased at smoke shops, gas stations, car washes and on the Internet — Messa expects its popularity will only increase.

"I think we probably will see a surge in the next two months because I figure what's going to happen is the word's going to get out that, 'Hey, they banned this stuff,' " Messa said.

Last month, the DEA announced it will outlaw the manufacture, possession and sale of five chemical compounds commonly found in the products while it studies them during the next year to determine whether they should be declared permanently controlled substances.

As a result of this action, federal authorities will require all stores and Internet operations to stop selling the products in the near future. The official date has not yet been announced.

An alarming rate

Though many of the packages are labeled "not for human consumption," some people use the contents as an alternative to marijuana because they won't go to jail if they're caught with it or because they believe it won't turn up in a drug test.

At a symposium on K2, Spice and other forms of herbal incense hosted by the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences this month, one officer from Montgomery County told the audience that probationers in his jurisdiction are using the substances at an alarming rate.

The products are cheaper than marijuana and contain artificial chemicals that can give users feelings similar to a marijuana high, such as euphoria, relaxation and sedation, but there is no accepted medical or therapeutic use for the chemical compounds.

Doctors, pathologists and law enforcement officials have become increasingly concerned about people using the substances because chemicals sprayed on the herbs have not been approved for human consumption, and there is no oversight of the manufacturing process, DEA officials said.

Laws, restrictions

Its effects are more potent than marijuana, experts say. Some people become sick after smoking the herbs, suffering hallucinations, nausea, vomiting, severe agitation, elevated blood pressure and rapid heart rate, said Jerry Walker, assistant director of the DEA's South Central Laboratory in Dallas.

At least 80 Texas cities have enacted ordinances in recent months to outlaw the sale and possession of the products or to restrict their usage, including Tomball, Alvin and many other cities in Brazoria County, such as Angleton, Lake Jackson, Clute and Freeport.

There is no Texas state law prohibiting the products, although the DEA reports at least 16 other states have banned or restricted its use.

At least two Texas legislators, including state Sen. Florence Shapiro, R-Plano, plan to introduce bills in the coming legislative session, beginning Jan. 11, to outlaw the products here.

K2 distributors blame counterfeit products for the controversy and for the sickening effects some people are experiencing. One distributor, Randy Stevens of K2 Verified, said he supports the DEA's action and predicts many store owners will be going to jail for selling counterfeit K2 products.

Like someone in shock

Reports to the Texas Poison Center Network about people becoming sick after using the substances increased steadily each month throughout this year. The highest number of calls was received from Harris County - 59 since Jan. 1.

Though Texas poison control officials have received 437 calls about the substances this year, Messa said that is probably only a fraction of the number of people going to hospital emergency rooms after smoking the herbs since most doctors don't call the poison control agency for help.

"It doesn't affect every single person the exact same way," Messa said, who first encountered the substance in a patient last year during the winter fraternity parties in Huntsville.

"Usually they come in very pale, they have a very high heart rate, their blood pressure is very high," Messa said. "They're sweaty. They almost look like somebody who's in shock. At first, they can't generally talk at all. And then as they begin to talk, they can't really make sense."

One Friendswood father, who asked not to be identified, said his 16-year-old son, a Friendswood High School student, became violently ill at their home last spring after smoking one of the products.

"We found him sitting on his bed, really kind of in a state, not even recognizing us at all," said the man, who spoke at the Harris County symposium. "He could have been on the moon. Within five minutes, once we were there dealing with him, he began to shake almost like he was having seizures.

"It scared the daylights out of us. So we got him off his bed down to the couch. And then the next thing we know, he proceeds to throw up violently for about the next 30 minutes - and began to complain of a massive headache."

Crystal Morrison, associate director of youth prevention and clinical services for The Council on Alcohol and Drugs Houston, said she is also encountering more and more people using the products in her client assessments. "Progressively, every month, it's gotten worse and worse and worse," Morrison said.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/7354674.html

"Credibility in immigration policy can be summed up in one sentence: Those who should get in, get in; those who should be kept out, are kept out; and those who should not be here will be required to leave."

"...for the system to be credible, people actually have to be deported at the end of the process."

US Congresswoman Barbara Jordan (D-TX)

Testimony to the House Immigration Subcommittee, February 24, 1995

Filed: Country: Belarus
Timeline
Posted

so who was the first guy to smoke the air freshener?

Some idiot that ran out of beer after the store closed for the night. After that it was monkey see...monkey do.

"Credibility in immigration policy can be summed up in one sentence: Those who should get in, get in; those who should be kept out, are kept out; and those who should not be here will be required to leave."

"...for the system to be credible, people actually have to be deported at the end of the process."

US Congresswoman Barbara Jordan (D-TX)

Testimony to the House Immigration Subcommittee, February 24, 1995

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Ecuador
Timeline
Posted

Whatever happened to the Better Old Days, when satisfying thrills were to be had by lighting farts?

06-04-2007 = TSC stamps postal return-receipt for I-129f.

06-11-2007 = NOA1 date (unknown to me).

07-20-2007 = Phoned Immigration Officer; got WAC#; where's NOA1?

09-25-2007 = Touch (first-ever).

09-28-2007 = NOA1, 23 days after their 45-day promise to send it (grrrr).

10-20 & 11-14-2007 = Phoned ImmOffs; "still pending."

12-11-2007 = 180 days; file is "between workstations, may be early Jan."; touches 12/11 & 12/12.

12-18-2007 = Call; file is with Division 9 ofcr. (bckgrnd check); e-prompt to shake it; touch.

12-19-2007 = NOA2 by e-mail & web, dated 12-18-07 (187 days; 201 per VJ); in mail 12/24/07.

01-09-2008 = File from USCIS to NVC, 1-4-08; NVC creates file, 1/15/08; to consulate 1/16/08.

01-23-2008 = Consulate gets file; outdated Packet 4 mailed to fiancee 1/27/08; rec'd 3/3/08.

04-29-2008 = Fiancee's 4-min. consular interview, 8:30 a.m.; much evidence brought but not allowed to be presented (consul: "More proof! Second interview! Bring your fiance!").

05-05-2008 = Infuriating $12 call to non-English-speaking consulate appointment-setter.

05-06-2008 = Better $12 call to English-speaker; "joint" interview date 6/30/08 (my selection).

06-30-2008 = Stokes Interrogations w/Ecuadorian (not USC); "wait 2 weeks; we'll mail her."

07-2008 = Daily calls to DOS: "currently processing"; 8/05 = Phoned consulate, got Section Chief; wrote him.

08-07-08 = E-mail from consulate, promising to issue visa "as soon as we get her passport" (on 8/12, per DHL).

08-27-08 = Phoned consulate (they "couldn't find" our file); visa DHL'd 8/28; in hand 9/1; through POE on 10/9 with NO hassles(!).

Posted

Google jwh-018 (there are other variations but this is the most common)

It's applied to a smokeable substrate. I have a buddy that smokes it because it doesn't show up on a drug test.

"The fact that we are here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is a sign of leadership failure. It is a sign that the U.S. Government can’t pay its own bills. It is a sign that we now depend on ongoing financial assistance from foreign countries to finance our Government’s reckless fiscal policies."

Senator Barack Obama
Senate Floor Speech on Public Debt
March 16, 2006



barack-cowboy-hat.jpg
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Filed: Country: Belarus
Timeline
Posted

Google jwh-018 (there are other variations but this is the most common)

It's applied to a smokeable substrate. I have a buddy that smokes it because it doesn't show up on a drug test.

But, who knows what's in the package of incense sold at a Houston convenience store. Anyway, here is a recent article in the Houston Press that goes into the background of JWH:

Beginning in 1984, Clemson organic chemistry professor John W. Huffman started creating synthetic versions of THC (pot's active ingredient) for possible use in treating AIDS and multiple sclerosis and for possible application in chemotherapy regimens.

Over the next 20 years, Huffman's team created about 450 weed-mimicking compounds, all of which bear his initials (JWH) and a number. JWH-018, one of the five compounds banned by the DEA, is probably the most common compound in K-2 variants, but now some others are used that were developed elsewhere, notably the HU (originally from Israel's Hebrew University) class.

Eventually some of Huffman's recipes trickled onto the Internet, and by the middle of the last decade, the earliest recreational variants of his compounds were being sold in Germany. While Huffman realized that the misuse of his compounds was inevitable, the scientist could only shake his head. He recently told the journal LiveScience that some of his synthetics are ten times as powerful as THC. As for those poor fools who would partake of them, the 78-year-old Huffman says they are "potential winners of Darwin Awards" who would "do a service to humanity by removing themselves from the gene pool."

http://www.houstonpress.com/content/printVersion/2097607/

"Credibility in immigration policy can be summed up in one sentence: Those who should get in, get in; those who should be kept out, are kept out; and those who should not be here will be required to leave."

"...for the system to be credible, people actually have to be deported at the end of the process."

US Congresswoman Barbara Jordan (D-TX)

Testimony to the House Immigration Subcommittee, February 24, 1995

 

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