Cannabis, also known as
marijuana,
marihuana, and
ganja (from
gañjā, meaning "
hemp"), among many other names , refers to any number
of
preparations of the
Cannabis plant intended for use as a
psychoactive drug. The most common
form of cannabis used as a drug is the dried
herbal form.
The typical herbal form of cannabis consists of the
flowers and subtending
leaves and
stalks of
mature pistillate
or
female plants. The
resinous form of the drug is known as
hashish (or merely as 'hash').
The major
psychoactive chemical compound in cannabis is
Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol
(commonly abbreviated as THC). At least 66 other
cannabinoids are also present in cannabis,
including
cannabidiol (CBD),
cannabinol (CBN) and
tetrahydrocannabivarin (THCV) among
many others, which are believed in influence the effects of
THC alone.
Cannabis use has been found to have occurred as long ago as the
third millennium B.C. In modern
times, the drug has been used for
recreational,
religious or
spiritual, and
medicinal purposes. The
United Nations (UN) estimated that in 2004
about 4% of the
world's adult
population (162 million people) use cannabis annually, and
about 0.6% (22.5 million) use it on a daily basis. The
possession,
use, or
sale of cannabis preparations containing
psychoactive cannabinoids became
illegal in most parts of the
world in the early
twentieth century. Since then, some
countries have intensified the
enforcement of cannabis
prohibition, while others have reduced
it.
History
Cannabis is
indigenous to
Central and
South
Asia.
Evidence of the inhalation of cannabis smoke
can be found as far back as the 3rd
millennium B.C., as indicated by charred
cannabis seeds found in a ritual brazier at an ancient burial site in
present day Romania
.
Cannabis
is also known to have been used by the ancient Hindus of India
and Nepal
thousands of
years ago. The herb was called
ganjika in
Sanskrit (गांजा/গাঁজা
ganja in modern
Indic languages). The ancient drug
soma, mentioned in the
Vedas as a sacred intoxicating
hallucinogen, was sometimes associated with
cannabis.
Cannabis was also known to the
ancient Assyrians, who
discovered its psychoactive properties through the
Aryans. Using it in some religious ceremonies, they
called it
qunubu (meaning "way to produce smoke"), a
probable origin of the modern word "cannabis". Cannabis was also
introduced by the Aryans to the
Scythians
and
Thracians/
Dacians, whose
shamans (the
kapnobatai—"those who walk on
smoke/clouds") burned cannabis flowers to induce a state of
trance.
Members of the cult of Dionysus, believed to have originated in Thrace (Bulgaria
, Greece
and Turkey
), are also
thought to have inhaled cannabis smoke. In 2003, a leather
basket filled with cannabis leaf fragments and seeds was found next
to a 2,500- to 2,800-year-old mummified
shaman in the northwestern Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region of China
.
Cannabis has an ancient history of ritual use and is found in
pharmacological cults around
the world. Hemp seeds discovered by archaeologists at
Pazyryk suggest early ceremonial practices like
eating by the
Scythians occurred during
the 5th to 2nd century B.C., confirming previous historical reports
by
Herodotus. One writer has claimed that
cannabis was used as a religious sacrament by ancient
Jews and early
Christians due
to the similarity between the Hebrew word "
qannabbos"
("
cannabis") and the Hebrew phrase "
qené bósem"
("aromatic cane"). It was used by
Muslims in
various
Sufi orders as early as the
Mamluk period, for example by the
Qalandars.
A study
published in the South African Journal of Science showed that
"pipes dug up from the garden of Shakespeare's home in Stratford upon
Avon
contain traces of cannabis." The chemical
analysis was carried out after researchers hypothesized that the
"noted weed" mentioned in
Sonnet 76 and
the "journey in my head" from
Sonnet 27
could be references to cannabis and the use thereof.
Cannabis was criminalized in the United States in 1937 due to
Marihuana Tax Act of 1937.
Several theories try to explain why it is illegal in most Western
societies.
Jack Herer, a cannabis
legalization activist and writer,
argues that the economic interests of the paper and chemical
industry were a driving force to make it
illegal./www.ireport.com/docs/DOC-237709 Another explanation is
that beneficial effects of hemp would lower the profit of
pharmaceutical companies which therefore have a vital interest to
keep cannabis illegal. Those economic theories were criticized for
not taking social aspect into account. The illegalization was
rather a result of
racism directed to
associate American immigrants of Mexican and African descent with
cannabis
abuse.
Forms
Cannabis (herbal form)
The terms
cannabis or
marijuana generally refer to the
dried flowers and subtending leaves and stems of the female
cannabis plant. This is the most widely consumed form, containing
3% to 22% THC. In contrast, cannabis strains used to produce
industrial hemp contain less than 1% THC and are thus not valued
for recreational use.
Hashish

Hashish.
Hashish (also spelled hasheesh) or hash is a concentrated
resin produced from the flowers of the female cannabis
plant. Hash is more potent than marijuana and can be smoked or
chewed. It varies in color from black to golden brown depending
upon purity.
Hash oil
Hash oil, or
honey oil, is an
essential oil extracted from the cannabis
plant through the use of various
solvents.
It has a high proportion of cannabinoids (ranging from 40-90%).
This oil is also used in the process of making a variety of
cannabis foods.
Kief
Kief is a powder made from
trichomes
removed from the leaves and flowers of cannabis plants. Kief can
also be compressed to produce one form of hashish, or consumed in
powder form.
Resin

Resin collected from a pipe.
Because of THC's
adhesive properties, resin
builds up inside the
paraphernalia when cannabis is
smoked. It has
tar-like
properties but still contains THC as well as other cannabinoids.
This resin still has all the psychoactive properties of cannabis
but is more difficult to smoke due to the discomfort caused to the
throat and lungs. Cannabis users typically only smoke resin when
cannabis is unavailable. Glass may be water-steamed at a low
temperature prior to scraping in order to make the resin easier to
remove.
Potency
According
to the United Nations Office on Drugs and
Crime
(UNODC), "the amount of THC
present in a cannabis sample is generally used as a measure of
cannabis potency." The three main forms of cannabis products
are the herb (marijuana), resin (hashish), and oil (hash oil). The
UNODC states that marijuana often contains 5% THC content, resin
"can contain up to 20% THC content", and that "Cannabis oil may
contain more than 60% THC content."
A scientific study published in 2000 in the Journal of Forensic Sciences (JFS) found
that the potency (THC content) of confiscated cannabis in the
United
States
(US) rose from "approximately 3.3% in 1983 and 1984", to "4.47% in
1997". It also concluded that "other
major cannabinoids (i.e.,
CBD,
CBN, and
CBC)"
(other chemicals in cannabis) "showed no significant change in
their concentration over the years".. More recent research
undertaken at the University of Mississippi's Potency Monitoring
Project has found that average THC levels in cannabis samples
between 1975 and 2007 have increased from 4% in 1983 to 9.6% in
2007.
Australia's
National
Cannabis Prevention and Information Centre (NCPIC) states that
the buds (flowers) of the female cannabis plant contain the highest
concentration of THC, followed by the leaves. The stalks and seeds
have "much lower THC levels". The UN states that the leaves can
contain ten times less THC than the buds, and the stalks one
hundred times less THC.
Routes of administration

Cannabis joints are potentially
the most harmful method of consumption.
Burning temperature can reach 700°C (1292°F).
Cannabis is consumed in many different ways, most of which involve
inhaling smoke.
The most commonly used include screened
bowls, bubblers (small pipes with water
chambers),
bongs,
one-hitter,
chillums, paper-wrapped
joints and tobacco-leaf-wrapped
blunts. Local methods differ by the
preparation of the cannabis plant before use, the parts of the
cannabis plant which are used, and the treatment of the smoke
before inhalation.
A
vaporizer heats herbal cannabis to
365–410 °F (185–210 °C), which causes the active ingredients to
evaporate into a
gas without burning the plant
material (the boiling point of THC is 392°F (200°C) at 0.02mmHg
pressure, and somewhat higher at standard atmospheric pressure). A
lower proportion of toxic chemicals are released than by smoking,
although this may vary depending on the design of the vaporizer and
the temperature at which it is set. This method of consuming
cannabis produces markedly different effects than smoking due to
the flash points of different cannabinoids; for example, CBN has a
flash point of 212.7°C and would normally be present in smoke but
might not be present in vapor.
As an alternative to smoking, cannabis may be consumed orally.
However, the cannabis or its extract must be sufficiently heated or
dehydrated to cause
decarboxylation of its most abundant
cannabinoid, tetrahydrocannabinolic acid (THCA), into psychoactive
THC.
Cannabinoids can be
leached from cannabis plant
matter using high-
proof spirits (often
grain alcohol) to create a
tincture, often referred to as
Green Dragon.
Cannabis can also be consumed as a
tea.
THC is
lipophilic and only slightly
water soluble (with
a solubility of 2.8 mg per liter), so tea is made by first
adding a
saturated fat to hot water
(i.e.
cream or any
milk
except skim) with a small amount of cannabis,
green or
black tea leaves
and
honey or
sugar,
steeped for approximately 5 minutes.
Effects

Main short-term physical effects of
cannabis.
Cannabis has
psychoactive and
physiological effects when consumed.
The minimum amount of
THC required to have a
perceptible psychoactive effect is about 10 micrograms per
kilogram of body weight. Aside from a subjective change in
perception, the most common short-term physical and neurological
effects include increased heart rate, lowered blood pressure,
impairment of short-term
episodic
memory, working memory,
psychomotor
coordination, and concentration. Long-term effects are less
clear.
Classification
While many drugs clearly fall into the category of either
stimulant,
depressant,
or
hallucinogen, cannabis exhibits a
mix of all properties, perhaps leaning the most towards
hallucinogen or
psychedelic
properties, though with other effects quite pronounced as well.
Though THC is typically considered the primary active component of
the cannabis plant, various
scientific
studies have suggested that certain other cannabinoids like CBD
may also play a significant role in its psychoactive effects.
Medical use
Although the extent of the medicinal value of cannabis has been
debated, it does have several well-documented beneficial effects.
Among these are: the amelioration of
nausea
and
vomiting, stimulation of
hunger in
chemotherapy
and
AIDS patients, lowered intraocular eye
pressure (shown to be effective for treating
glaucoma), as well as general
analgesic effects (pain reliever).
Less confirmed individual studies also have been conducted
indicating cannabis to be beneficial to a gamut of conditions
running from
multiple sclerosis
to
depression. Synthesized
cannabinoids are also sold as
prescription drugs, including Marinol (
dronabinol in the United States and Germany) and
Cesamet (
nabilone in Canada, Mexico, The
United States and The United Kingdom).
Currently, the
U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) has not approved smoked marijuana for any
condition or disease in the United States. Regardless, thirteen
states have legalized cannabis for medical use.
Canada
, Spain
, The Netherlands and Austria
have also
legalized cannabis for medicinal use.
Long-term effects
The smoking of cannabis is the most harmful method of consumption,
as the inhalation of
smoke from
organic materials can cause various health
problems.
By comparison, studies on the
vaporization
of cannabis found that subjects were "only 40% as likely to report
respiratory symptoms as users who do not vaporize, even when age,
sex, cigarette use, and amount of cannabis consumed are
controlled." Another study found vaporizers to be "a safe and
effective cannabinoid delivery system."
While a study in New Zealand of 79 lung-cancer patients suggested
daily cannabis smokers have a 5.7 times higher risk of lung cancer
than non-users, another study of 2252 people in Los Angeles failed
to find a correlation between the smoking of
cannabis and lung, head or neck cancers. These
effects have been attributed to the well documented anti-tumoral
properties of
cannabinoids,
specifically
tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and
cannabidiol. Some studies have also found that
moderate cannabis use may protect against head and neck cancers, as
well as lung cancer. Some studies have shown that
cannabidiol may also be useful in treating
breast cancer.
Cannabis use has been assessed by several studies to be
correlated with the development of anxiety,
psychosis, and depression. Indeed, a 2007
meta-analysis estimated that cannabis use is
statistically associated,
in a
dose-dependent
manner, to an increased risk in the development of psychotic
disorders, including schizophrenia.
No causal mechanism has
been proven, however, and the meaning of the correlation and
its direction is a subject of debate that has not been resolved in
the scientific community. Some studies assess that the causality is
more likely to involve a path from cannabis use to psychotic
symptoms rather than a path from psychotic symptoms to cannabis
use, while others assess the opposite direction of the causality,
or hold cannabis to only form parts of a "causal constellation",
while not inflicting mental health problems that would not have
occurred in the absence of the cannabis use.
Though cannabis use has at times been associated with stroke, there
is no firmly established link, and potential mechanisms are
unknown. Similarly, there is no established relationship between
cannabis use and heart disease, including exacerbation of cases of
existing heart disease. Though some
fMRI
studies have shown changes in neurological function in long term
heavy cannabis users, no long term behavioral effects after
abstinence have been linked to these changes.
Adulterants
Adulterants in cannabis are less common
than in other drugs of abuse.
Chalk (in the
Netherlands) and glass particles (in the UK) have been used at
times to make cannabis appear to be higher quality. Increasing the
weight of
hashish products in Germany with
lead caused
lead
intoxication in at least 29 users. In the Netherlands two
chemical analogs of
Sildenafil (
Viagra) were found in adulterated marijuana.
Gateway drug theory
Some claim that trying cannabis increases the probability that
users will eventually use "harder" drugs. This hypothesis has been
one of the central pillars of anti-cannabis drug policy in the
United States, though the validity and implications of these
hypotheses are highly debated. Studies have shown that tobacco
smoking is a better predictor of concurrent illicit hard drug use
than smoking cannabis.
No widely accepted study has ever demonstrated a cause-and-effect
relationship between the use of cannabis and the later use of
harder drugs like heroin and cocaine. However, the prevalence of
tobacco cigarette advertising and the practice of mixing tobacco
and cannabis together in a single large
joint,
common in Europe, are believed to be a factor in promoting nicotine
dependency among young persons investigating cannabis.
A 2005 comprehensive review of the literature on the cannabis
gateway hypothesis found that pre-existing traits may predispose
users to addiction in general, the availability of multiple drugs
in a given setting confounds predictive patterns in their usage,
and drug sub-cultures are more influential than cannabis itself.
The study called for further research on "social context,
individual characteristics, and drug effects" to discover the
actual relationships between cannabis and the use of other
drugs.
A new user of cannabis who feels there is a difference between
anti-drug information and their own experiences will apply this
distrust to public information about other, more powerful drugs.
Some studies state that while there is no proof for this gateway
hypothesis, young cannabis users should still be considered as a
risk group for intervention programs. Other findings indicate that
hard drug users are likely to be
"poly-drug" users, and that interventions must
address the use of multiple drugs instead of a single hard
drug.
Another gateway hypothesis is that while cannabis is not as harmful
or addictive as other drugs, a gateway effect may be detected as a
result of the "common factors" involved with using any illegal
drug. Because of its illegal status, cannabis users are more likely
to be in situations which allow them to become acquainted with
people who use and sell other illegal drugs. By this argument, some
studies have shown that alcohol and tobacco may be regarded as
gateway drugs. However, a more parsimonious explanation could be
that cannabis is simply more readily available (and at an earlier
age) than illegal hard drugs, and alcohol/tobacco are in turn
easier to obtain earlier than cannabis (though the reverse may be
true in some areas), thus leading to the "gateway sequence" in
those people who are most likely to experiment with any drug
offered.
Legal status
Cannabis propaganda sheet from 1935.
Since the beginning of the 20th century, most countries have
enacted
laws against the
cultivation, possession, or transfer of cannabis for recreational
use. These laws have impacted adversely on the cannabis plant's
cultivation for non-recreational purposes, but there are many
regions where, under certain circumstances, handling of cannabis is
legal or licensed. Many jurisdictions have lessened the penalties
for possession of small quantities of cannabis, so that it is
punished by
confiscation and sometimes
a
fine, rather than
imprisonment, focusing more on those who
traffic the drug on the black
market.
In some
areas where cannabis use has been historically tolerated, some new
restrictions have been put in place, such as the closing of
cannabis coffee shops near the
borders of the Netherlands, closing of coffee shops near secondary
schools in the Netherlands and crackdowns on "Pusher Street" in
Christiania
, Copenhagen
in 2004.
Some jurisdictions use free voluntary treatment programs and/or
mandatory treatment programs for frequent known users. Simple
possession can carry long
prison terms in
some countries, particularly in
East Asia,
where the sale of cannabis may lead to a sentence of
life in prison or even
execution.
Price
The price or street value of cannabis varies strongly by region and
area. In addition, some dealers may sell potent buds at a higher
price.
In the
United States, cannabis is overall the #4
value crop, and is #1 or #2 in many states including California
, New
York
and Florida
, averaging $3,000/lb. It is believed to
generate an estimated $36 billion market. Most of the money is
spent not on growing and producing but on smuggling the supply to
buyers.
The United
Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
claims in its 2008 World Drug Report that typical
U.S. retail prices are 10-15 dollars per gram (approximately $290
to $430 per ounce). Street prices in
North America are known to range at about $150 to $250 per
ounce.
The
European
Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction reports that
typical retail prices in Europe for cannabis varies from 2€ to 14€
per gram, with a majority of European countries reporting prices in
the range 4–10€. In the United Kingdom, a cannabis plant has an
approximate street value of £300.
Truth serum
Cannabis was used as a
truth serum by the
Office of Strategic
Services (OSS), a US government
intelligence agency formed during World
War II.
In the early 1940s, it was the most
effective truth drug developed at the OSS labs at St.
Elizabeths Hospital
; it caused a subject "to be loquacious and free in
his impartation of information."
In May 1943, Major George Hunter White, head of OSS
counter-intelligence operations in the
US, arranged a meeting with Augusto Del Gracio, an enforcer for
gangster
Lucky Luciano. Del Gracio was
given cigarettes spiked with THC concentrate from cannabis, and
subsequently talked openly about Luciano's
heroin operation. On a second occasion the dosage was
increased such that Del Gracio passed out for two hours.
Breeding and cultivation
It is often claimed by growers and breeders of herbal cannabis that
advances in breeding and cultivation techniques have increased the
potency of cannabis since the late 1960s and early '70s, when THC
was first discovered and understood. However, potent seedless
marijuana such as "
Thai sticks" were
already available at that time. Sinsemilla (Spanish for "without
seed") is the dried, seedless inflorescences of female cannabis
plants. Because THC production drops off once pollination occurs,
the male plants (which produce little THC themselves) are
eliminated before they shed pollen to prevent pollination. Advanced
cultivation techniques such as
hydroponics,
cloning,
high-intensity
artificial lighting, and
the sea of green method are
frequently employed as a response (in part) to prohibition
enforcement efforts that make outdoor cultivation more risky. These
intensive horticultural techniques have made it possible to grow
strains with fewer seeds and higher potency. It is often cited that
the average levels of THC in cannabis sold in United States rose
dramatically between the 1970s and 2000, but such statements are
likely skewed because of undue weight given to much more expensive
and potent, but less prevalent samples.
"Skunk" refers to several named strains of potent cannabis, grown
through selective breeding and often hydroponics. It is a
cross-breed of
Cannabis sativa and
C. indica
(although other strains of this mix exist in abundance). Skunk
cannabis potency ranges usually from 6% to 15% and rarely as high
as 20%. The average THC level in
coffee shops in the Netherlands is
about 18–19%.
Skunk can sometimes be incorrectly mistaken for all types of female
herbal cannabis.
After revisions to
cannabis
rescheduling in the UK, the government moved cannabis back from
a class C to a class B drug. A purported reason was the appearance
of high potency cannabis.
It is noted that one of the earliest strains of skunk to appear was
that of "SKUNK #1", which has been inbred since 1978. High potency
herbal cannabis has been around potentially, even longer.
A Dutch double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, cross-over
study examining male volunteers aged 18–45 years with a
self-reported history of regular cannabis use concluded that
smoking of cannabis with high THC levels (marijuana with 9–23%
THC), as currently sold in coffee shops in the Netherlands, may
lead to higher THC blood-serum concentrations. This is reflected by
an increase of the occurrence of impaired psychomotor skills,
particularly among younger or inexperienced cannabis smokers, who
do not adapt their smoking style to the higher THC content. High
THC concentrations in cannabis was associated with a dose-related
increase of physical effects (such as increase of heart rate, and
decrease of blood pressure) and psychomotor effects (such as
reacting more slowly, being less concentrated, making more mistakes
during performance testing, having less motor control, and
experiencing drowsiness). It was also observed during the study
that the effects from a single
joint at times lasted for more than eight
hours. Reaction times remained impaired five hours after smoking,
when the THC serum concentrations were significantly reduced, but
still present. The researchers suggested that THC may accumulate in
blood-serum when cannabis is smoked several times per day.
Another study showed that consumption of 15 mg of
Δ
9-THC resulted in no impairment to learning whatsoever
occurring over a three-trial selective reminding task after two
hours. In several tasks, Δ
9-THC increased both speed and
error rates, reflecting “riskier” speed–accuracy trade-offs.
See also
- Cannabis plant
- Cannabis health
- Cannabis legality
- Cannabis use demographics
Notes
References
Further reading
External links