
Marijuana Information
Marijuana
is a green or gray mixture of dried, shredded flowers and
leaves of the hemp plant (Cannabis sativa). It is the most
often used illegal drug in this country. All forms of cannabis
are mind-altering (psychoactive) drugs; they all contain THC
(delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol), the main active chemical in
marijuana. There are about 400 chemicals in a cannabis plant,
but THC is the one that affects the brain the most.
There are many different names for marijuana. Slang terms
for drugs change quickly, and they vary from one part of the
country to another. They may even differ across sections of
a large city.
Terms from years ago, such as pot, herb, grass, weed, Mary
Jane, and reefer, are still used. You might also hear the
names skunk, boom, gangster, kif, or ganja.
There are also street names for different strains or "brands"
of marijuana, such as "Texas tea," "Maui wowie,"
and "Chronic." A recent book of American slang lists
more than 200 terms for various kinds of marijuana.
Marijuana's effect on the user depends on the strength or
potency of the THC it contains. THC potency has increased
since the 1970s but has been about the same since the mid-1980s.
The strength of the drug is measured by the average amount
of THC in test samples confiscated by law enforcement agencies.
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Most
ordinary marijuana has an average of 3 percent THC.
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Sinsemilla
(made from just the buds and flowering tops of female plants)
has an average of 7.5 percent THC, with a range as high
as 24 percent.
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Hashish
(the sticky resin from the female plant flowers) has an
average of 3.6 percent, with a range as high as 28 percent.
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Hash
oil, a tar-like liquid distilled from hashish, has an average
of 16 percent, with a range as high as 43 percent.
Long-term studies of high school students and their patterns
of drug use show that very few young people use other drugs
without first trying marijuana. The risk of using cocaine
has been estimated to be more than 104 times greater for those
who have tried marijuana than for those who have never tried
it. Although there are no definitive studies on the factors
associated with the movement from marijuana use to use of
other drugs, growing evidence shows that a combination of
biological, social, and psychological factors are involved.
Marijuana affects the brain in some of the same ways that
other drugs do. Researchers are examining the possibility
that long-term marijuana use may create changes in the brain
that make a person more at risk of becoming addicted to other
drugs, such as alcohol or cocaine. While not all young people
who use marijuana go on to use other drugs, further research
is needed to determine who will be at greatest risk.
Some users, especially someone new to the drug or in a strange
setting, may suffer acute anxiety and have paranoid thoughts.
This is more likely to happen with high doses of THC. These
scary feelings will fade as the drug's effects wear off. When
the early effects fade, over a few hours, the user can become
very sleepy. In rare cases, a user who has taken a very high
dose of the drug can have severe psychotic symptoms and need
emergency medical treatment. Other kinds of bad reactions
can occur when marijuana is mixed with other drugs, such as
PCP or cocaine.
Those who become more heavily involved with marijuana can
become dependent, and that is their prime reason for using
the drug. Others mention psychological coping as a reason
for their use - to deal with anxiety, anger, depression, boredom,
and so forth. But marijuana use is not an effective method
for coping with life's problems, and staying high can be a
way of simply not dealing with ones problems.
There
are some signs you might be able to see.
If someone is high on marijuana, he or she might :
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seem
dizzy and have trouble walking
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seem
silly and giggly for no reason
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have
very red, bloodshot eyes
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have
a hard time remembering things that just happened
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signs
of drugs and drug paraphernalia, including pipes and rolling
papers
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odor
on clothes and in the bedroom
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use
of incense and other deodorizers
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use
of eye drops
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clothing,
posters, jewelry, etc., promoting drug use
What
is "tolerance" for marijuana?
"Tolerance"
means that the user needs increasingly larger doses of the drug
to get the same desired results that he or she previously got
from smaller amounts. Some frequent, heavy users of marijuana
may develop tolerance for it.
Do
marijuana users lose their motivation?
Some
frequent, long-term marijuana users show signs of a lack of
motivation (amotivational syndrome). Their problems include
not caring about what happens in their lives, no desire to work
regularly, fatigue, and a lack of concern about how they look.
As a result of these symptoms, some users tend to perform poorly
in school or at work. Scientists are still studying these problems.
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