CD
Synthetic Cannabinoid
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Synthetic Cannabinoid
, Synthetic Marijuana, K2, JWH
See Also
Marijuana
Synthetic Cathinone
(Bath Salts)
NBOMe
Chemical Dependency
Substance Abuse Evaluation
Agitated Delirium
Pharmacology
Synthetic Cannabinoids
Originally produced as research chemicals to study receptor binding in the 1980s
Synthetic Cannabinoids have 5-10 fold higher bindings affinity at specific receptor sites
Produced by spraying dried, shredded herbal plant leaves with
Cannabinoid Receptor
Agonist
s
Synthetic
Agonist
s are THC-like agents based on one of four synthetic parent agents
Synthetic
Agonist
s are small, lipid soluble, non-polar molecules (22 to 26 carbons)
Many current generation substances are indazoles (fused benzene and pyrene rings)
Agents act at two
Cannabinoid Receptor
s (with high affinity to CB1)
See
Cannabinoid Receptor
Most agents are pure
Agonist
s at
Cannabinoid
CB1 cerebral receptor (contrast with THC as a partial
Agonist
)
Synthetics result in more intense, and unpredictable
Intoxication
than THC
Synthetic THC lacks the
Cannabidiol
(
Antipsychotic
, anticonvulsant) effects of
Cannabis
sativa (
Marijuana
)
Hence the unpredictable psychotic effects and
Seizure
s with synthetic THC
In addition, formulations frequently change to overcome detection
Typically smoked in pipe or
Cigarette
paper
Has also been vaporized and inhaled, as well as ingested
Preparations
Sold in 1-3 gram foil pouches of dried
Herbals
Typically labeled as "not for human consumption" or marketed as incense or potpourri
Often sold in gas stations and head shops
More than 50 distinct products have been identified in the U.S.
Various
Herbals
and crushed leaves are added for appearance only
Synthetic Cannabinoids dissolved in acetone is dripped onto the leaves and allowed to dry
Concentration and potency varies considerably even within the same package
Inconsistent effects across products as well as within the same brand (unpredictable)
Even different effects in the same package shared by different users
May occur with concentrated portions within the package
Street Names
K2 (U.S.)
Kronic
Spice (Europe and UK)
JWH (John W. Huffman)
Legal
Marijuana
Fake Weed
Black Mamba
Mojo
Scooby Snax
Death Ride
Intensely aromatic incense
Cloud-9 (AB-PINACA)
Liquid form vaporized and resulted in multiple hospitalizations in 2014
Symptoms
Intoxication
Marijuana
-like
Intoxication
(sought effects)
Euphoria, elevated mood or intense "high"
Uncontrolled laughter
Disinhibition
Other effects often with severe mood changes
Hyperadrenergic effects
Agitated Delirium
(with possible
Seizure
s)
Altered Mental Status
with sedation
Anxiety
Psychosis
Signs
Intoxication
Diaphoresis
Hyperreflexia
Nystagmus
Conjunctiva
l injection
Symptoms
Withdrawal
Headache
Anxiety
Depressed Mood
Irritability
Adverse Effects
Effects vary due to the ever changing formulations and compositions of Synthetic Cannabinoids and contaminants
Small modifications in
Cannabinoid
chemical structures may have drastically different physiologic effects
Even the same formulation, may have widely different potency due to manufacturing practices
Life threatening bleeding (2018)
Related to
Anticoagulant
-laced Synthetic Cannabinoids in 2018
Cannabinoid
s were laced with Brodifacoum (rat poison) with effects that last for months
May require high dose
Vitamin K
(50 mg PO three times daily) for months (at up to $45,000 per month)
(2018) Presc Lett 25(6):35 [PubMed]
Neuropsychiatric effects (central
Serotonin
and
Dopamine
receptor binding)
Confusion
Agitation
, irritation or
Violent Behavior
Severe anxiety
Memory Loss
Loss of consciousness and other central depressant effects (esp. fourth generation agents)
Generalized Seizure
s (4% of cases)
"Zombie
Intoxication
" (fourth generation agents)
Blank stare, groaning and purposeless movements
Acute
Psychosis
("Spiceophrenia")
Severe paranoia and
Hallucination
s (auditory and visual)
May persist for days to months
May occur after a single dose
Gastrointestinal effects
Nausea
or
Vomiting
Diarrhea
Cardiovascular effects (cardiac
Potassium
channel binding)
Chest Pain
(including due to cardiac ischemia)
Palpitation
s
Cardiac Arrhythmia
(including
Supraventricular Tachycardia
,
Ventricular Tachycardia
and
Ventricular Fibrillation
)
Heart Rate
changes (
Tachycardia
or
Bradycardia
)
Blood Pressure
changes (
Hypertension
or
Hypotension
)
Endocrine and renal effects
Hypokalemia
Metabolic Acidosis
Hyperglycemia
Acute Kidney Injury
Rhabdomyolysis
Withdrawal symptoms with regular use
Anxiety, irritability,
Insomnia
Chills
Profuse diaphoresis
Tremor
s
Myalgias
Headache
s
Anorexia
,
Nausea
,
Vomiting
Labs
Serum Creatinine
Serum Glucose
Creatine Kinase
(CK)
Serum
Lactic Acid
Serum
Troponin
Coagulation studies (INR, PTT)
Urine Drug Screen
ing
Does not typically detect Synthetic Cannabinoids (producers frequently modify formulations)
Diagnostics
Electrocardiogram
Differential Diagnosis
See
Unknown Ingestion
Management
Acute
See
Unknown Ingestion
See
Agitated Delirium
Precautions
Consult with poison control
Some Synthetic Cannabinoid forms have had paradoxical
Anticholinergic Reaction
s and
Agitation
to
Naloxone
Aggressive supportive care management
No specific antidotes
Avoid unnecessary intubation
Protect patients and staff
See
Agitated Delirium
Sedation allows for
IV Access
, patient exposure, labs and diagnostics
IV crystalloid fluid
Resuscitation
Indicated for
Dehydration
Benzodiazepine
s
First-line agent
Indicated for
Agitation
and
Seizure
s
Diphenhydramine
Indicated for
Dystonia
Evaporative Cooling
Indicated for hyperthermia
Antipyretics are typically ineffective (fever is unrelated to hypothalamic set point)
Antipsychotic
s (e.g.
Zyprexa
,
Haloperidol
)
Indicated for acute
Psychosis
, esp. refractory to
Benzodiazepine
s
Avoid prophylactically due to theoretical risk of
Seizure
Rhabdomyolysis
Aggressive intravenous hydration
Seizure
s
First-line:
Benzodiazepine
s
Second-line:
Phenobarbital
Avoid
Sodium
channel blocking agents (e.g.
Phenytoin
)
Management
Chemical Dependency
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Motivational Enhancement Therapy with abstinence-based incentives
No medication is supported with sufficient evidence
Management
Disposition
Acute
Intoxication
typically resolves within 6 hours of ingestion
May discharge home when
Clinical Sobriety
and no serious complications identified
Complex presentations may require hospital observation or admission
Precautions
Agents are unregulated and unpredictable with variable components, potency and toxicity
Acute
Psychosis
lasting months may occur after only a single dose
Intentionally adulterated products with life threatening effects have been reported
Life threatening bleeding due to
Anticoagulant
-laced Synthetic Cannabinoids in 2018
See Adverse Effects as above
Associated with 24 deaths in Mississippi in 2015
Resources
NIH
Drug Abuse
http://www.drugabuse.gov/publications/drugfacts/synthetic-cannabinoids
DEA K2 or Spice
http://www.dea.gov/druginfo/drug_data_sheets/K2_Spice.pdf
References
Tomaszewski (2016)
Drugs of Abuse
, ACEP PEM Conference, Orlando, attended 3/8/2016
Fattore (2011) Front Behav Neurosci 5: 60
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3187647/
Haynes, Meadors and Yuan (2016) Crit Dec Emerg Med 30(2): 3-9
Rosenbaum (2012) J Med Toxicol 8(1): 15–32
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3550220/
Swaminathan and LaPoint in Herbert (2019) EM:Rap 19(5): 6-7
Trautmann (2021) Crit Dec Emerg Med 35(3): 15-20
Kemp (2016) Am J Med 129(3):240 [PubMed]
Khullar (2014) J Gen Intern Med 29(8):1200-4 +PMID:24553958 [PubMed]
Klega (2018) Am Fam Physician 98(2): 85-92 [PubMed]
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