A smokeless cannabis-vaporizing device delivers the
same level of active therapeutic chemical and produces
the same biological effect as smoking cannabis, but
without the harmful toxins, according to UCSF
researchers.Results of a UCSF study, which focuses
on delivery of the active ingredient
delta-9-tertrahydrocannibinol, or THC, are reported in
the online issue of the journal “Clinical Pharmacology
and Therapeutics.”
“We showed in a recent paper in the journal
‘Neurology’ that smoked cannabis can alleviate the
chronic pain caused by HIV-related neuropathy, but a
concern was expressed that smoking cannabis was not
safe. This study demonstrates an alternative method
that gives patients the same effects and allows
controlled dosing but without inhalation of the toxic
products in smoke,” said study lead author Donald I.
Abrams, MD, UCSF professor of clinical medicine.
The research team looked at the effectiveness of a
device that heats cannabis to a temperature between
180 and 200 degrees C, just short of combustion, which
occurs at 230 degrees C. Eighteen individuals were
enrolled as inpatients for six days under supervision
in the General Clinical Research Center at San
Francisco General Hospital Medical Center.
Under the study protocol, the participants received
on different days three different strengths of
cannabis by two delivery methods—smoking or
vaporization—three times a day. Plasma concentrations
of THC were measured along with the exhaled levels of
carbon monoxide, or CO. A toxic gas, CO served as a
marker for the many other combustion-generated toxins
inhaled when smoking. The plasma concentrations of THC
were comparable at all strengths of cannabis between
smoking and vaporization. Smoking increased CO levels
as expected, but there was little or no increase in CO
levels after inhaling from the vaporizer, according to
Abrams.
“Using CO as an indicator, there was virtually no
exposure to harmful combustion products using the
vaporizing device. Since it replicates smoking’s
efficiency at producing the desired THC effect using
smaller amounts of the active ingredient as opposed to
pill forms, this device has great potential for
improving the therapeutic utility of THC,” said study
co-author Neal L. Benowitz, MD, UCSF professor of
medicine, psychiatry and biopharmaceutical sciences.
He added that pills tend to provide patients with more
THC than they need for optimal therapeutic effect and
increase side effects.
Patients rated the “high” they experienced from
both smoking and vaporization and there was no
difference between the two methods by patient
self-report of the effect, according to study
findings. In addition, patients were asked which
method they preferred.
“By a significant majority, patients preferred
vaporization to smoking, choosing the route of
delivery with the fewest side effects and greatest
efficiency,” said Benowitz.
Co-authors include Cheryl A. Jay, MD, UCSF
neurology; and Starley B. Shade, MPH; Hector Vizoso,
RN; and Mary Ellen Kelly, MPH, UCSF Positive Health
Program at San Francisco General Hospital Medical
Center.
The study was funded by the University of
California’s Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research.
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Source: |
University of California
- San Francisco |
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Published on 25th
May 2007
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