Officials in New York are issuing a warning with regards to a small outbreak of synthetic cannabinoid illnesses which have sent at least 15 people to the emergency room in East and Central Harlem and Chelsea over the last few days.
The report also stated that in New York synthetic cannabinoid associated visits to the emergency department have increased by 220% (assuming this is in comparison to 2013).
New York legislation doesn't explicitly control any of the newer waves of synthetic cannabinoid receptor agonists, but it does broadly define what a synthetic cannabinoid is and what a synthetic cannabinoid analog is.
This report seems on the small side especially when compared to recent reports in Colorado, Louisiana, Texas, and Florida, but these things always start small and increase rapidly. I'll update if I see any more information.
UPDATE / July 28, 2014 at 1:30 pm:
Here is the actual NY Department of Health and Mental Hygiene press release.
Also, here is a link from a story over at the Village Voice Blogs. I simply love the title (minus the "fake weed" terminology).
I still don't see any reports on what specific adverse effects have been encountered. Or of course no mention of analytical confirmation at this point.
Stay safe.
FTG
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Sunday, July 27, 2014
Saturday, July 26, 2014
Thought for the Weekend
While writing up case reports regarding synthetic cannabinoid-associated deaths and reading other reports, this thought occurred...
Synthetic cannabinoid receptor agonists (especially newer generation compounds from 2013+) are a diverse chemical grab bag o' "fun".
Fun is defined here as adverse effects including tachycardia, seizure, nephrotoxicity, and death.
If you choose to partake in the substances, then keep that in mind. And no, I do not recommend or condone using synthetic cannabinoid containing products, so don't ask me what substances I would recommend using (seriously I get those kinds of questions).
Cheers,
FTG
Synthetic cannabinoid receptor agonists (especially newer generation compounds from 2013+) are a diverse chemical grab bag o' "fun".
Fun is defined here as adverse effects including tachycardia, seizure, nephrotoxicity, and death.
If you choose to partake in the substances, then keep that in mind. And no, I do not recommend or condone using synthetic cannabinoid containing products, so don't ask me what substances I would recommend using (seriously I get those kinds of questions).
Cheers,
FTG
Sunday, July 6, 2014
AMB Series of Synthetic Cannabinoids
Due to some recent illnesses and detections in herbal incense products (named Train Wreck 2 and Kali Berry 2), two newer generation synthetic cannabinoids have been added to the controlled substances list by the state of Louisiana. These are 5F-AMB and FUB-AMB.
The AMB series of compounds can be considered derivatives
of the earlier AB-INACA series of synthetic cannabinoids. AMB compounds differ
from the AB-INACA substances by a replacement of a primary amine with methoxy
group. This change leads to a moiety structurally based off the amino acid,
valine, also known as 2-amino-3-methylbutanoic acid. Valine is not produced by the human body and must be ingested
via the diet.
Indole based derivatives also exist. Two of these are named MMB018 and MMB2201.
So, what's all of this mean? I don't know. And I doubt any other toxicologist or chemist knows either. Again, as with all new emerging substances, this new series has an unknown pharmacological and toxicological profile. Simply, it is just more
unknown entities to add to the rapidly growing heap of unknowns.
I'll end with a question and I welcome your
responses...would we be in this cat and mouse game between manufacturers and
legislators if we had approached the first wave of JWH compounds (JWH-018,
JWH-073, JWH-200) somewhat differently back in 2010-2011?
Saturday, July 5, 2014
Never let the truth get in the way of a good headline
Similar to how the 2012 incident in Miami that became associated with "bath salts" resulted in a wildfire-type spread of media hysteria, a plethora of Internet articles centered on MDPV (methylenedioxypyrovalerone) started appearing on June 30th and multiplied rapidly over the course of a day or so. At this time, I quickly count approximately 20 or so articles using the word "cannibal" in the title.
Let me state this here on this blog:
MDPV, other substituted cathinones, or any other "bath salt" drug were not involved in the incident the media termed as "the Miami Causeway Cannibal". Rudy Eugene's attack on Ronald Poppo in Miami, Florida in 2012 was not MDPV or "bath salt"-related. Period. Other than tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), NO substances were detected in Mr. Eugene's blood specimen taken by authorities. I'm sure the laboratories doing the analysis were of the highest forensic toxicology accreditation/certification and utilized the most up-to-date analytical technologies.
Here are just a few:
Let me state this here on this blog:
MDPV, other substituted cathinones, or any other "bath salt" drug were not involved in the incident the media termed as "the Miami Causeway Cannibal". Rudy Eugene's attack on Ronald Poppo in Miami, Florida in 2012 was not MDPV or "bath salt"-related. Period. Other than tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), NO substances were detected in Mr. Eugene's blood specimen taken by authorities. I'm sure the laboratories doing the analysis were of the highest forensic toxicology accreditation/certification and utilized the most up-to-date analytical technologies.
The lesson here is that media loves to take a story and run - whether there is evidence of truth or not.
My advice:
"Believe none of what you hear and only half of what
you see."
Cheers,
ForensicToxGuy