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Surge in Hospital Visits Linked to a Drug Called Spice Alarms Health Officials

Weird

3rd-Eye Jedi
Veteran
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/25/h...n=click&contentCollection=U.S.&pgtype=article

A sharp rise in visits to emergency rooms and calls to poison control centers nationwide has some health officials fearing that more potent and dangerous variations of a popular drug known as spice have reached the nation’s streets, resulting in several deaths.
In the first three weeks of April, state poison control centers received about 1,000 reports of adverse reactions to spice — the street name for a family of synthetic substances that mimic the effects of marijuana — more than doubling the total from January through March, according to the American Association of Poison Control Centers.
The cases, which can involve spice alone or in combination with other substances, have appeared four times as often this year as in 2014, the organization said. On Thursday alone there were 172 reports, by far the most in one day this year.
Health departments in Alabama, Mississippi and New York have issued alerts this month about more spice users being rushed to hospitals experiencing extreme anxiety, violent behavior and delusions, with some of the cases resulting in death. Similar increases have occurred in Arizona, Florida, New Jersey and Texas.
The total number of fatalities nationwide this year is not available, health officials said. One person in Louisiana died Wednesday and two others were in intensive care, said Dr. Mark Ryan, the director of the Louisiana Poison Center.
“We had one hospital in the Baton Rouge area that saw over 110 cases in February. That’s a huge spike,” Mr. Ryan said. “There’s a large amount of use going on. When one of these new ingredients — something that’s more potent and gives a bigger high — is released and gets into distribution, it can cause these more extreme effects.”
Experts were unsure whether the increase this month in spice-related emergencies reflected greater use of the drug or a particularly dangerous formulation. Mr. Ryan said a large portion of cases appeared to involve a form called mab-chminaca.
Law enforcement agencies, from the Drug Enforcement Administration to local police departments, have struggled to control the flow of synthetic cannabinoids, marijuana-looking substances that are sprayed with a hallucinogenic chemical and then smoked. Those chemicals, typically imported from China by American distributors, come in hundreds of varieties; new formulations appear monthly, with molecules subtly tweaked to try to skirt the D.E.A.’s list of illegal drugs as well as drug-detecting urine tests.
Although the entire class of drugs is illegal because of the psychological effects, each new variety can present distinct health risks caused by its underlying chemistry or contaminants in renegade manufacturing facilities. Experts warn that the popular term “synthetic marijuana” is a misnomer, as the substances merely resemble marijuana but can be 100 times more potent.
The use of synthetic cannabinoids as well as calls to poison control centers have decreased since 2011 as awareness of their danger and illegality has spread, national data indicates. Still, about one in 20 high school students used the drugs in 2014; about one in 30 adults age 19 to 28 used them in 2013, the most recent data available for that age group.
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More than 400 emergency-room visits in Mississippi were attributed to synthetic cannabinoids in April, according to the state health department. Two of those cases involved Jeffrey and Joey Stallings of McComb, who each spent several days in intensive care in medically induced comas, their mother, Karen, said in a telephone interview.
Ms. Stallings said that Jeffrey, 24, and Joey, 29, smoked a type of spice known as “mojo” that they received from a dealer. She said that Jeffrey became delusional, thinking that a woman was bleeding in their hallway, and extremely violent; Joey became extremely agitated before she took them to the hospital.
Ms. Stallings said that her sons were released from the hospital after about a week and that doctors told her that Jeffrey might have permanent kidney damage. Efforts to reach the brothers for comment were unsuccessful.
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Debbie

23 minutes ago I'm glad I did all my drugging in the 60s-80s and got out alive and HIV free. Whatever I did, these new synthetic drugs are really out...
DJS

23 minutes ago I’d like to see Marijuana legalized just to shut all the people up who are convinced the legalization of marijuana will put an end to to...
A. Stanton

23 minutes ago I was under the impression that marijuana is a boon to mankind.


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“I told them, ‘This is killing you and you don’t see it,’” Ms. Stallings said. “There’s no telling what that stuff was. There’s no telling at all.”
A unique case occurred earlier this year in Texas. The death of Kendrick Vernell Sneed, a soldier at Fort Hood, on Jan. 13 had been considered to be possibly caused by Ebola, because he had recently returned from deployment to a hot zone for the disease in West Africa. The local police department, however, announced on April 16 that an autopsy determined the cause to be “synthetic cannabinoid intoxication.”
The increases in cases in Mississippi and Alabama demonstrate the challenge facing law enforcement officials. Last year, D.E.A. agents made about 40 arrests and seized more than 400 pounds of synthetic drugs in those states as part of a wider national operation. Yet supply chains clearly remain.
“Is it frustrating? Yes, but when you’re in this business what you come to understand is that total eradication of a drug threat just isn’t going to happen,” said Keith Brown, the special agent in charge of the D.E.A.’s New Orleans field division, which covers Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi. “Until we can control the demand there’s going to be someone with supply.”
Mr. Brown added: “We had success last year, and now it’s coming back. It’s like a guy who tends a garden or tends a yard. It’s impossible to eradicate weeds. They come back. They grow again.”
Mr. Ryan said his Louisiana call center had fielded fewer calls in the past several years partly because emergency-room doctors had begun to recognize the effects of certain variations of spice and knew how to handle those cases themselves, leaving most of the calls from worried individuals. The tenor of recent calls has been different, he said.
“It’s been more than 90 percent hospitals this year,” Mr. Ryan said. “It’s not, ‘Hey, I smoked this thing and I don’t feel well.’ It’s, ‘This guy’s trying to tear up the E.R. and we have him locked down in restraints. We don’t know what he’s taken. What do we do?’”
 

vostok

Active member
Veteran
USMC-100201-M-3762C-001.jpg


This has been sensationalized by the press in many parts of the world as "Artificial Cannabis" initiated by the right wing media
to cause confusion and 'drug panic' amongst the those who may drift of the path ...

This spice is a chemical concoction, to attempt to imitate weed with currently seriously fucked chemicals,
including many forms of bovine(cows) anti parasite drugs, dvd cleaner compounds and just about anything a
2 year chem student can whip up, avoid at all costs....and condemn anyone you hear calling it cannabis.


...thank you
 

Green Squall

Well-known member
I read some of the user reports on erowid. It's some seriously f'ed up stuff. I'm glad it wasn't around when I was a kid because I stupidly probably would have tried it. Whenever these chemicals get banned, all they have to do is tweak the formula and it's legal again. And yes, It's really annoys me when they refer to it as "legal cannabis".
 
W

wegobigupnorth

why the fuck do people still smoke that shit...Thought they stopped selling it since pretty much everyone can obtain real weed these days...In North America anyway
 

TNTBudSticker

Active member
Veteran
That's such a bs article....who cares about lies.

In California that stuff is synthetic marijuana and it's looked down upon because it tried to pass itself as marijuana by some higher ups but no higher than the weed itself so it self-destructed.

Reading an article a long time 3 years about some military guys about 15 of them got shit canned because they all smoked spice and the drugs were acid,pcp,marijuana and some other stuff that someone could whip up if they know what they are doing and its never consistent in its high.


So if some 3rd world guy wants to try fake stuff.It's because they are foreigners and someone let all the drugs addicts off the boats and in town won't you say?

Spice or Sheep ? Most would choose Spice.
 

vostok

Active member
Veteran
I am a foreigner and half this site is foreign, even coming at you from Holland, I heard thats foreign too, and the best best weed is foreign, in my 40 plus year opinion, of token

may your sheep shoot spice
 
B

Baron Greenback

This sort of thing going has become more prevalent in the UK. The government seems to use emergency banning orders but cannot keep up as a slight difference in chemical composition renders it a new drug.
This is a direct consequence of prohibition in the UK, people want to get lean and just cannot afford weed - more than 200£ an ounce in places.
Humans have had a relationship with cannabis for many thousands of years, we know what the effects are and we know how many have been made ill or died as a result.
 

bombadil.360

Andinismo Hierbatero
Veteran
View Image

This has been sensationalized by the press in many parts of the world as "Artificial Cannabis" initiated by the right wing media
to cause confusion and 'drug panic' amongst the those who may drift of the path ...

This spice is a chemical concoction, to attempt to imitate weed with currently seriously fucked chemicals,
including many forms of bovine(cows) anti parasite drugs, dvd cleaner compounds and just about anything a
2 year chem student can whip up, avoid at all costs....and condemn anyone you hear calling it cannabis.


...thank you


another QTF from me. well said!

it is ridiculous how many idiots actually love to smoke that spice shit... you have peeps in the forums here that actually think is cool and harmless... I know this guy that was new at my work place, he was there about 6 months... in the last two months he started borrowing money from co-workers, and suddenly disappeared... from the day he started working with us up to his last day, you could see how his teeth got all brown and fucked up, and how his personality became weirder and weirder until he simply vanished... then a co-worker ran into him in a different part of the country, he had moved there, and his teeth were even more fucked up and the guy was a mess, the place that he had moved to is the place were all the spice-heads go to buy that shit...it is cheap and plentiful and easy to smuggle and has the reputation of being "just like cannabis", which cannot be further from the truth...

peace
 

Al Botross

Active member
ICMag Donor
Veteran
13 hospitalized in San Diego after overdose of synthetic drug Spice

13 hospitalized in San Diego after overdose of synthetic drug Spice

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Officials said several people in downtown San Diego overdosed on the synthetic drug Spice. (Drug Enforcement Administration)


Thirteen people were taken to local hospitals Sunday afternoon 11/23/15 for emergency treatment after suffering from an overdose of the synthetic drug Spice, according to the San Diego Fire-Rescue Department.

The 13, found throughout downtown, were suffering from vomiting and convulsions and displaying "extremely odd behavior," said Fire Capt. Joe Amador. Ages of those treated ranged from 13 to 45.

Police are attempting to track down all victims, witnesses and those selling the drug. The drug may have been sold in black packages with blue dragons on the side, they said.

Marketed in marijuana stores and online under names such as Mojo, Black Mamba and Annihilation, Spice is said to mimic the high produced by marijuana. But authorities have warned of the health dangers of the drug that mixes herbs and chemicals.

See the most-read stories this hour >>
The U.S. Enforcement Administration has begun a nationwide crackdown on Spice
 

aridbud

automeister
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Could that be a Monsanto product, too?

Another reason to obliterate synthetic and opt for the plant itself.
 

shithawk420

Well-known member
Veteran
Lol nice Dune reference floral.ive never seen it in person,but that pic on first page looked a lot like weed.thats wrong.someone could smoke it thinking that its real weed.thats not cool or right
 

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