Topic: THC/Marijuana
choclablover's photo
Wed 12/17/08 01:22 PM
Edited by choclablover on Wed 12/17/08 01:22 PM
laugh

no photo
Tue 03/31/09 04:09 PM
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/03/090325190342.htm


Discovery Of Mechanism That Processes 'THC' Type Brain Compound May Lead To New Medicines For Pain, Addiction

ScienceDaily (Mar. 31, 2009) — Dale Deutsch, Ph.D., Professor of Biochemistry and Cell Biology at Stony Brook University and colleagues discovered a new molecular mechanism for the processing of endocannabinoids, brain compounds similar to THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, and essential in physiological processes such as pain, appetite, and memory.


Reported online this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), the finding could pave the way for new medicines for pain, addiction, appetite control and other disorders.

Dr. Deutsch and colleagues in the Departments of Biochemistry and Cell Biology (Martin Kaczocha) and Neurobiology and Behavior (Sherrye Glaser, Ph.D.) are the first to successfully identify two known fatty acid binding proteins (FABPs) that carry the endocannabinoid anandamide (AEA), a neurotransmitter, from the cell membrane to interior of the cell where it is destroyed. This identification enabled the research team to inhibit FABPs in various laboratory experiments and thereby reduce AEA breakdown inside cells. In their study, “Identification of intracellular carriers for the endocannabinoid anandamide,” the researchers report that they decreased the breakdown of AEA in some instances by approximately 50 percent.

“Inhibiting FABPs could potentially raise the levels of AEA in the brain’s synapses,” says Dr. Deutsch. “Naturally occurring AEA levels have been shown to curb pain without the negative side effects, such as motor coordination problems, from molecules like THC. Therefore, it makes sense to target AEA for therapeutic purposes.”

He emphasizes that their groundbreaking discovery of the role of FABPs in transporting this class of neurotransmitters may prove to be a crucial step in developing novel drug targets for endocannabinoids by way of inhibiting FABPs. In support of the research, The State University of New York (SUNY) Stony Brook Office of Technology Licensing and Industry Relations (OTLIR) has filed U.S. Patent applications comprising the discovery.

The OTLIR manages all intellectual property matters for the SUNY Research Foundation. In actively marketing this unlicensed technology created by Dr. Deutsch, the Stony Brook OTLIR welcomes commercial entities interested in partnering with the University. The licensing agent for the project is Adam DeRosa of the OTLIR.

The breakdown of AEA requires two factors. First, there needs to be a mechanism for transporting AEA to the location where it is inactivated because AEA is a fatty compound and thus unable to move inside the watery cellular environment. Second, the cell must express an enzyme called FAAH, which controls the breakdown and inactivation of AEA. In the laboratory, the researchers coaxed a nonneuronal cell type (COS-7) to express FAAH. These FAAH-expressing COS-7 cells were able to break down AED efficiently, indicating that the intracellular AEA transport mechanism was already present and operation in these cells. The researchers identified these carriers as two separate FABPs.

Dr. Deutsch believes that because a transporter for the AEA class of neurotrasmitters had never been discovered until the Stony Brook findings, continued research may explain many unanswered questions about AEA. Future research may uncover more knowledge about AEA transport, as well as the entire role these neurotransmitters play in pain, inflammation, appetite control, addiction, and perhaps other physiological processes related to many human disorders.

The research was funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, part of the National Institutes of Health.
Adapted from materials provided by Stony Brook University Medical Center, via Newswise.

metalwing's photo
Tue 03/31/09 04:29 PM
I don't think pot is any more harmful than booze, generally less additive, but overall not good for your health. It also has the potential for causing car accidents, children not doing their homework, and all that other stuff that everyone already knows about. The reality is that pot is easy to get on the black market and if you want to goof off, get drunk, or otherwise screw around, legal pot is not the make or break item for your success.

As already mentioned, if it was sold as tobacco with high taxes the govt would bring in a lot of cash that it really needs right now. A lot of drug dealers would make a lot less money (a big plus in my book). A lot of billions of dollars would not be leaving the country (a problem in it's own right). Law enforcement probably wouldn't cost any less but the time spent could focus on the hard drugs that actually destroy lives and harm children like smack and crack.

I say make it legal and tax the crap out of it. Make the penalties stiffer than booze for selling it to children.

no photo
Tue 03/31/09 06:13 PM
Well I tend to look at things like the fact that we have 5% of the world population and 25% of the world prisoner population as a sign that something in the criminal justice system is broken.

Its my humble opinion that the war on drugs, locking up users and petty dealers is a big part of the problem.


I am glad some folks in power agree.

http://virginiadem.wordpress.com/2009/03/29/senator-jim-webb-introduces-national-criminal-justice-commission-act-of-2009/

 ☮️ Coolchic Dee 💟's photo
Wed 04/01/09 03:37 AM
smokin :thumbsup: tongue2

TelephoneMan's photo
Wed 04/01/09 06:37 AM
The only reason it is still illegal (as well as most "controlled" substances) ... is that the C.I.A. can make a ****load more money on it if it is illegal than if the government were to legalize it and tax it.

The illegal funds generated by the C.I.A. bringing it into the country generate funds that are off the books and out of the eye of Congress, that the C.I.A. can use for clandestine operations as they influence the governments of other nations.

If drugs were legalized, it would take this money out of the pocket of the C.I.A., and that is never going to happen.

I seriously think the C.I.A. is the chief importer of illicit drugs to this country.

Some food for thought...

... when the Taliban government ruled Afghanistan, Afghanistan produced 45% of the world's opium. Opium is used to make heroin and medical morphine and other pharmacuetical pain killers.

Now, according to news reports, with U.S. influence inside Afghanistan, they now produce 93% of the world's opium:

New Yorlk Times article:
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CE4DF1638F93BA1575BC0A9619C8B63&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=1

I'm not a conspiracy theorist, but I've put two-and-two together, and I believe the only reason we are in Afghanistan is for the natural resources involved with supplying the pharmacuetical companies in America with the raw materials to produce pain killers (i.e. opium used to make morphine, etc.)

What we will never know as a people in a country run by corrupt politicians and clandestione groups like the C.I.A.... is... how is this all connected to the events of September 11th, and the invasion and now occupation of Afghanistan by the United States.

Now the perpetuation of the same conflict, thus creating a new Vietnam.

Too much money is generated under the table, to be used for off-the-books military operations... for any controlled substance in this country to ever be brought "legal" and taxed. Billions of dollars a year is generated by the influx of the drug trade. There is no way the government is ever going to let go of this monkey on their back.

See also COINTELPRO:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COINTELPRO

While the sheeples in this country seem to believe "oh, this could never happen, nor is any of this stuff probable..." it is happening right here, and it is very probable.

And what I am referring to woith this Afghanistan stuff is insidputable public knowledge, right in our faces, the givernment iof this country is allowing the production of opium in Afghanistan to increase.

So much for the smoke screen called "The War on Drugs"... there is no war "on" drugs... the war is all about getting as much of these drugs INTO the country as possible through organized crime connections mixed with C.I.A. intervention.

Before you call me a kook, prove I'm wrong, then call me a kook. But please have good references, and do your research. Don't go simply off the media circus bull$hit we hear on CNN/ABC/CBS/NBC/MS-NBC/FOX...

What of the true stories of the corpses of soldiers being gutted and filled with heroin during the Vietnam War?

Trust no one.

Ask every question.

Think for yourself.

Prepare to survive when they crash the system.






Filmfreek's photo
Wed 04/01/09 08:03 AM
Yep. I agree, and I believe you TelephoneMan.


As long as the government is making money off of the smugglers and drug cartels, it will never be legal.

Even though the so called "war on drugs" is a complete waste of time and money. What is it? Something like in the trillions every year? All in vain...for a bullsh!t cause.

It's no wonder we are in a depression.slaphead

TelephoneMan's photo
Wed 04/01/09 11:18 AM
Yup... and how much of our tax dollars goes to this "war on drugs"... so that the government can lay down a smole screen of mis-information, and keep our eyes off of what is really going on behind the scens... namely, the C.I.A. mixing with organized crime, selling dope in this country, and using the money for under-the-radar weapons proliferation to keep governments of thrid world countries unstable (which is easier to manipulate than a stable government)

Welcome to Political Science 101

deke's photo
Wed 04/01/09 07:52 PM

I wonder if it is not the Cannabis, itself, but moreso because pot, like Alcohol, is often the gateway drug to harder substances (like Cocaine, Heroin, Meth, Crack, other Opiates, and Benzos).

wow the only one who see's the obvious truth

unless it for medical they should throw ur asses in jail
yes i know ALOT about weed

FACT:it makes people STUPID AND LAZY and americans are sorry enough as it stands

if it where legal kids would be even dumber than they are now and it's hard enough to keep kids away from other legal crap.how many teens and preteens have tried alchohal because mommy or daddy refuses to lock the booze cabinet or just flat leaves it out.

no photo
Wed 04/01/09 07:55 PM



<======= stupid and lazy and stoned

no photo
Wed 04/01/09 07:56 PM

TelephoneMan's photo
Wed 04/01/09 09:38 PM


As long as the government is making money off of the smugglers and drug cartels, it will never be legal.



I think what could be proven without much discovery or digging is that the government IS the smugglers and the drug cartels... there is no distinction of this compared to that, they are one in the same.

creativesoul's photo
Wed 04/01/09 10:27 PM
noway huh noway

creativesoul's photo
Wed 04/01/09 10:33 PM
Talk about the dumbing down of America...

Freedom...

Sheesh! It's own worst enemy.

laugh

All of you smokers do yourself a favor. The next time you are high and you get that great idea that you always forget later...

WRITE IT DOWN AND READ IT THE NEXT DAY WHEN YOUR STRAIGHT...

Then reformulate your idea regarding how weed affects you!

:wink:

I am all for legalizing it, because it is not as though it would make it that much easier to obtain if it were legal. For one to kid themselves into believing that it has any mental benefit is a joke on themselves...

Peace!

Filmfreek's photo
Wed 04/01/09 11:53 PM
Gee....what a typical generalization.


I'm a regular smoker...and my memory is more sharp than most non-smokers I know.




Read much government propaganda???

no photo
Thu 04/02/09 07:13 AM
Edited by Bushidobillyclub on Thu 04/02/09 07:17 AM
Well my point in posting here is two fold.

1) what we criminalize we pay for. The resources that are spent on this go out of country (billions a year), the research that is stifled due to a demonization of the drug(Canabiniods are a type of neurotransmitter). Also hemp oil is a better bio fuel then corn, but hardly anyone knows that . . . I wonder why . . . the by products are useful, yet its political demonization paralyzes us to its benefits.


2) As well as the lives ruined for petty possession or small time growers is obscence. We arrest people and think that our justice system, a system of harsh punishments is going to fix people, which has been shown to be inadequate to solve addiction, or even help at all.


We need to legalize it, tax it, and spend that money on education programs to keep kids from starting, and on research to understand why people are self medicating and how to help them without the risks.

We are smarter then this, we need to use our brains, not have an emotional reaction which is how we deal with drugs in this country now.

We just throw up our hands say that drug users are lesser people and deserve the punishments of jail time, without thinking what it costs every citizen to house feed and take care of drug users, and small time drug sellers in prison.

Personally I want drug users out of prison and in treatment programs, I want them working, I want those prison spaces used by pedophiles, I want violent offenders to get longer sentences, and harsher punishments.

Right now our system is a revolving door mainly due to the war on drugs which we have lost and most of us don't even care.

creativesoul's photo
Thu 04/02/09 08:54 AM
Research it, and then publicly post the dangers associated with it when it is legalized...

Hemp itself at least, has many uses which could help our economy and the environment.

This country is too big to be a pure democracy. The fed is too big as a result. States need more power to govern themselves, but that has drawbacks as well...

Legalizing weed is not going to fix our economy, nor the world's.

Smoke up Johnny!!!

I say we need a war on education... :wink:


no photo
Thu 04/02/09 01:56 PM
Edited by Bushidobillyclub on Thu 04/02/09 01:58 PM

Research it, and then publicly post the dangers associated with it when it is legalized...

Hemp itself at least, has many uses which could help our economy and the environment.

This country is too big to be a pure democracy. The fed is too big as a result. States need more power to govern themselves, but that has drawbacks as well...

Legalizing weed is not going to fix our economy, nor the world's.

Smoke up Johnny!!!

I say we need a war on education... :wink:


I have researched it, pot is not the only problem. Crime how we target criminals and how we prosecute criminals are all big problems.

You can disagree with me, but don't pull the research card creative.

I wont post on a subject I am not well versed in. I am not a smoker myself so the snide remarks smack of belligerence.

Legalizing pot would be a big move toward a balanced perspective of drugs. Alcohol is the number one killer in the USA among ALL drugs.

Tobacco is next.


Senator Webb has some good ideas. If you care to comment I would appreciate you read up on some of the moves he is calling for, then make direct comments on that.

As for your evidence that legalizing pot would be detrimental, I would say it is you who should provide some kind of evidence that the current law is curbing use, and that it would be worse then alcohol if made legal.

hungarian77's photo
Thu 04/02/09 03:59 PM
than where will i make my money L0L

ionicsublime's photo
Thu 04/02/09 04:08 PM
according to scientific research you would have to smoke 40,000 times the amount it takes you to get stoned in order to overdose! yes forty thousand times