| Cannabis
Cannabis
sativa L., the hemp plant, grows wild throughout most
of the tropic and temperate regions of the world. Prior
to the advent of synthetic fibers, the cannabis plant
was cultivated for the tough fiber of its stem. In the
United States, cannabis is legitimately grown only for
scientific research.
Cannabis
contains chemicals called cannabinoids that are unique
to the cannabis plant. Among the cannabinoids synthesized
by the plant are cannabinol, cannabidiol, cannabinolidic
acids, cannabigerol, cannabichromene, and several isomers
of tetrahydrocannabinol. One of these, delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol
(THC), is believed to be responsible for most of the
characteristic psychoactive effects of cannabis. Research
has resulted in development and marketing of the dronabinol
(synthetic THC) product, Marinol®, for the control
of nausea and vomiting caused by chemotheraputic agents
used in the treatment of cancer and to stimulate appetite
in AIDS patients. Marinol® was rescheduled in 1999
and placed in Schedule III of the CSA.
Cannabis
products are usually smoked. Their effects are felt
within minutes, reach their peak in 10 to 30 minutes,
and may linger for two or three hours. The effects experienced
often depend upon the experience and expectations of
the individual user, as well as the activity of the
drug itself. Low doses tend to induce a sense of well-being
and a dreamy state of relaxation, which may be accompanied
by a more vivid sense of sight, smell, taste, and hearing,
as well as by subtle alterations in thought formation
and expression. This state of intoxication may not be
noticeable to an observer. However; driving, occupational,
or household accidents may result from a distortion
of time and space relationships and impaired coordination.
Stronger doses intensify reactions. The individual may
experience shifting sensory imagery, rapidly fluctuating
emotions, fragmentary thoughts with disturbing associations,
an altered sense of self- identity, impaired memory,
and a dulling of attention despite an illusion of heightened
insight. High doses may result in image distortion,
a loss of personal identity, fantasies, and hallucinations.
Three
drugs that come from cannabis--marijuana, hashish, and
hashish oil--are distributed on the U.S. illicit market.
Having no currently accepted medical use in treatment
in the United States, they remain under Schedule I of
the CSA. Today, cannabis is illicitly cultivated, both
indoors and out, to maximize its THC content, thereby
producing the greatest possible psychoactive effect.
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