Find a Health Sci/Medical Library and get this article: Mikuriya, Tod H. and Aldrich, Micheal R., "Cannabis 1988 Old Drug, New Dangers, The Potency Debate", Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, Vol 20(1), Jan- Mar, 1988 pg 47. Summary and Conclusions: Observation of the real world of social and marijuana use, where autotitration is the norm, renders the scare tactics of the _new_marijuana_ proponets not only inaccurate but irrelevant (*). There is much published evidence about the availability of highly potent varieties of cannabis from the ninetheenth century through the present day. The effects attributed to the _new_marijuana_ are the same ones debated for centuries in many different cultures. The assertion that "all marijuana research to date has been done on 1 or 2 percent THC material" (Cohen 1968) ignores several thousand years of human experience with the drug. The old medical cannabis extracts were stronger than most of the forms now available, though the potency of illicit hash oils by the mid-1970's was approaching the level of medicinal preparations available before their removal from the USP. While it may be true that sinsemilla is more widely available than 10 or 15 years ago, its potency has not changed significantly from the 2.4 to 9.5 percent THC materials available in 1973-1974 (see Table I), or the five to 14 percent sinsemilla of 1975 (Perry 1977). The range of potencies available then (marijuana at 0.1% to 7.8% THC, averaging 2.0% to 5.0% THC by 1975) was approximately the same as that reported now. With such a range, the evidence simply cannot support the argument by Cohen (1986) that marijuana is "ten or more times more potent than the product smoked ten years ago." And to say that marijaua potency has increased 1,400 percent since _any_ date in history is patent nonsense. It is not legitimate to imply that _average_ low potencies represent the _full_range_ of potencies available in reality. Neither is it valid to cite the _low_end_of_the_range_then_ as a baseline to compare with the _high_end_of_the_range_now_. The claimed baseline for THC content in the early 1970's would appear to be too low, probably because confiscated, stored police samples were utilized; and this low baseline makes the claimed difference in potency appear to be greater than it has been in reality. In sum, the _new_marijaua_ is not new and neither is the hyperbole surrounding this issue. The implications of the new disinformation campaign are serious. Many people, particularly the experienced users of the 1960's and their children, will once again shrug off the warnings of drug experts and not heed more reasonable admonishments about more dangerous drugs. This is not only abusive to those who look to science, the medical profession, and government for intelligent leadership, but will sully the repuatations of drug educators who wittingly cry wolf, and will inevitably diminish the credibility of drug abuse treatment professionals who pass on such flawed reports. (* end quote *) [*] my only critisism of this article is that they included this reference to auto-titration. Auto-titration is irrelevant in light of the fact that they show that the potency has not changed. Mentioning autotitration only serves to cloud the issue, since there is some controversy over it. - Lamont **************************** Article Separation ***************************** From: [den 0] at [midway.uchicago.edu] Anonymous sent me the abstract and asked that I post it. Marijuana as Antiemetic Medicine: A Survey of Oncologists' Experiences and Attitudes by Richard Doblin and Mark A. R. Kleiman Abstract: A random-sample anonymous survey of the members of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) was conducted in the spring of 1990 measuring the attitudes and experiences of American oncologists concerning the antiemetic use of marijuana in cancer chemotherapy patients. The survey was mailed to about one-third (N = 2430) of all U.S.-based ASCO members and yielded a response rate of 43% (1035). More than 44% of the respondents report recommending the (illegal) use of marijuana for the control of emesis to at least one cancer chemotherapy patient. Almost half (48%) would prescribe marijuana to some of their patients if it were legal. As a group, respondents considered (smoked) marijuana to be somewhat more effective than the legally available (oral) synthetic THC (Marinol) and roughly as safe. Of the respondents who expressed an opinion, a majority (54%) thought marijuana should be available by prescription. These results bear on the question of whether mariujana has a "currently accepted medical use," an issue in an ongoing administrative and legal dispute concerning whether marijuana in smoked form should be available by prescription along with synthetic THC in oral form. This survey demonstrates that oncologists' experience with the medical use of marijuana is more extensive, and their opinions of it more favorable, than the regulatory authorities appear to have believed. --------- (End quote.) The above was printed w/o permission, and I don't know where the study will be (has been?) published. ***************************** Article Separation ***************************** But if you are interested in more information on Marijuana Potency you might want to find: ElSohly, M.A.,Holley,J.H.,Lewis,G.S.,Russell,M.H., and Turner,C.E., "Constituents of Cannabis sativa L.XXIV: The Potency of Confiscated Marijuana, Hashish, and Hash Oil Over a Ten-Year Period," Journal of Forensic Sciences, Vol. 29, No. 2, April 1984, pp.500-514. This is the report of the Potency Monitoring Program of NIDA/DEA. ****************************** Article Separation **************************** TI: Cannabinoid receptor gene cloned. AU: Goodwin-FK SO: JAMA, The Journal of the American Medical Association, Sept 19, 1990, v264, n11, p1389(1). AB: Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) is the psychologically active agent in marijuana. Recent studies have indicated that specialized receptors for THC exist on brain cells. Now researchers at the United States National Institutes of Health have announced that they have been able to clone the gene responsible for the production of the receptor. This should lead to the development of mammalian tissue culture models of the interaction between the THC molecule and the brain, which in turn could lead to the development of new pharmaceutical agents that can deliver the pain-killing, anticonvulsant and other effects of THC without the known side effects of the drug. Marijuana is used to treat glaucoma, a condition of increased fluid pressure within the eyeball, and in some cases to relieve nausea during chemotherapy. TI: Marijuana receptor gene cloned [news] AU: Marx-J SO: Science. 1990 Aug 10; 249(4969): 624-6 TI: Planning for serendipity. AU: Synder-SH SO: Nature, August 9, 1990, v346, n6284, p508(1). TI: Structure of a cannabinoid receptor and functional expression of the cloned cDNA AU: Matsuda-LA; Lolait-SJ; Brownstein-MJ; Young-AC; Bonner-TI SO: Nature. 1990 Aug 9; 346(6284): 561-4 AB: Marijuana and many of its constituent cannabinoids influence the central nervous system (CNS) in a complex and dose-dependent manner. Although CNS depression and analgesia are well documented effects of the cannabinoids, the mechanisms responsible for these and other cannabinoid-induced effects are not so far known. The hydrophobic nature of these substances has suggested that cannabinoids resemble anaesthetic agents in their action, that is, they nonspecifically disrupt cellular membranes. Recent evidence, however, has supported a mechanism involving a G protein-coupled receptor found in brain and neural cell lines, and which inhibits adenylate cyclase activity in a dose-dependent, stereoselective and pertussis toxin-sensitive manner. Also, the receptor is more responsive to psychoactive cannabinoids than to non-psychoactive cannabinoids. Here we report the cloning and expression of a complementary DNA that encodes a G protein-coupled receptor with all of these properties. Its messenger RNA is found in cell lines and regions of the brain that have cannabinoid receptors. These findings suggest that this protein is involved in cannabinoid-induced CNS effects (including alterations in mood and cognition) experienced by users of marijuana. ***************************** Article Separation ***************************** look in OMNI magazine, October 88 or 89 I beleive. This researcher found the receptors in the brain that THC acts upon, an unusually large amount of frontal receptors, with no damage even after heavy long term exposure...in other words, completely invalidating dr heathbar's bogus studies. I had it and lost it...but a quick search in the library reference system crossedw with OMNI will turn it up. This is real stuff. You should read it. ****************************** Article Separation ***************************** i don't have the article here, but there was a recent story in _the journal of nih research_ about the effects on children of mothers that smoked pot. the dean of the boston university school of nursing went to jamacia where about 100% of the men and 10% of the women participate in rastafarianism, which involves 10 to 50(?) spliffs of pot a week. (even on the low end, this is Heavy pot use.) mothers who smoked had children that performed, tested from age 0 to 5, either the same or Better than mothers who didn't smoke. the article surmised that perhaps the mothers that smoked had better living conditions, somehow, and that was the cause of the improvement, not the pot itself.