Serving and Supporting Licensed Patients In New Mexico
Safe Smoking
SMOKE
AND MIRRORS
All
drugs pose risks. Whether medicinal or recreational, whether herbal or
pharmaceutical, whether legal or illicit, all drugs pose risks. Marijuana's
primary risk is for respiratory illness. Marijuana is a natural drug, but smoke
in any quantity and from any source irritates the respiratory tract.
COUGHS
AND COLDS
Except
for the cannabinoids in marijuana and the nicotine in tobacco, the two herbs
are quite similar. As smoke, both contain tar and carbon monoxide. In fact,
puff for puff, marijuana smoke contains more of both. As smoke, both can narrow
your air passages and thereby reduce lung capacity. As smoke, both can cause
chronic coughing and spitting up of phlegm. As smoke, both can cause cellular
damage to the lungs, impairing your resistance to infections by fungi, bacteria
and viruses. Tobacco smoke is a direct cause of emphysema. But research shows
that marijuana smoke does not cause emphysema. Tobacco smoke can cause both
acute and chronic bronchitis. Marijuana smoke is more likely to cause acute
bronchitis rather than chronic, but both usually can be remedied simply by
reducing or temporarily stopping smoking. Coughing while smoking...you've
inhaled too much smoke. Coughing after smoking...you've been smoking too often.
The heaviest marijuana smoker's dose amounts to the volume of roughly two
cigarettes of tobacco a day. Many marijuana smokers light up once or twice a
week, the equivalent of barely two cigarettes a month. Most medicinal marijuana
patients medicate just once or twice a day. The most intense usage may be found
among glaucoma patients, some who administer the cigarette equivalent of two
packs of day. For those, smoking marijuana poses severe respiratory risk.
POTENCY
To
reduce respiratory irritation, simply reduce smoke inhalation. Sift out
low-to-no potency twigs and seeds. When given the choice, choose bud over leaf.
Leaf averages only 1 to 2 per cent THC, while ordinary bud averages 3 to 5 per
cent. Recently improved methods of hybridization grow technology have produced
strains with increased scores. Some cultivators have claimed to have achieved
THC percentages of 22%.Leaf is best
used for cooking...save the bud for smoking. The health equation is obvious.
The more potent your smoke, the less you will need to use. Hashish does usually
fulfill the goal of a more potent puff, but comes with several caveats that
effectively eliminate it from consideration as a more healthful drug. As a
concentration of the resin, hashish lacks the other constituents found in the
fibrous portions of the bud that contribute to the total marijuana experience.
Thus its medicinal effects are quite different from marijuana when consumed
whole. The resin rarely is unadulterated, but is pressed together with binders
that possibly contain contaminants which also require higher and harsher
temperatures for combustion then when marijuana is smoked whole.Store
your prized herbal medication in such a way as to assure it retains its
potency. If purchased, the herb probably came packaged in a plastic zipper type
food storage bag. That is only a first line of defense. Such bags are
waterproof, but not air proof, else its sweet aroma would not penetrate beyond
the bag. Place that bag inside another, this second one an "oven
bag," marketed for roasting. Such bags are indeed air proof. Bags hardly
protect the delicate herb from being crushed, however, so place the double bag
inside a rigid and airtight container such as glass or Tupperware type plastic.
Keep the bud whole to keep it fresh and thereby retain its potency. Next, store
the rigid container in a cool, dark place. Refrigerators are fine, and freezers
are better. Kept frozen, herbs lose little potency. Do not store in an any area
(such as an unfinished attic or cellar) that in the coldest winter months is
exposed to night and day temperature fluctuations sufficient to freeze and
thaw, and refreeze and rethaw causing herbs to crumble, with a similar
consequent loss of potency as from being crushed.
PURITY
Given
the choice, go organic, as pesticides and other chemicals washed off food are
not washed off during normal cannabis processing and use. Trust your throat and
your head. If just a little puff causes you to cough, or if a little too much
gives you a headache, don't blame the herb, blame the chemicals. Breathe deeply
if you want, but do not hold that breath. Once the delicate membranes of the
cilia of your lungs are coated by the air and smoke, no amount of holding your
breath will provide any greater effect. Instead it only further irritates your
lungs. Cannabinoids are fat soluble and so are quickly absorbed through the
lungs. Tars, however, are absorbed more slowly. So take it easy, breathe easily
and don't hold your breath!
ROLLING
PAPERS
The
Institute of Medicine's (IOM) 1999 report on medicinal marijuana cautions that,
"As a cannabinoid drug delivery system, marijuana cigarettes are not
ideal." Rolling papers both hold the marijuana and hold back its
combustion. The thinner the joint (the cigarette), the more room the marijuana
has to breathe. But two thin joints compared to one thick require two sheets of
rolling paper rather than one. Even a single sheet needlessly adds to the toxic
load, especially of tar. In a study funded jointly by the Multidisciplinary Association
for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) and the California chapter of the National
Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) showed that the marijuana
in the roach end (the butt) filters out tars streaming from the marijuana in
the ember end, and does so more effectively than does a water pipe. However, if
you eventually smoke the roach all the tar that was filtered is consumed. The
joint study also noted the benefits of a joint in its being air cooled on all
sides, as rolling paper serves to aerate the smoke before it reaches your
mouth. Hemp papers compared to traditional fiber rolling papers are much
thicker and less porous. Joints made with hemp rolling paper also snuff out
easily, thus requiring multiple ignitions. Stick with the more traditional
fibers for rolling papers of cotton, rice and tree pulp. Filter tips can filter
out much tar and most ash, but unfortunately, they also filter out some
cannabinoids. You end up smoking more, thereby canceling out the benefit of the
filter tip.
PIPES
Smoke
is hot and dry. Smoke dries out your mouth and throat, making you more
susceptible to colds and flu. Desiccated air from indoor heating, which dries
out your nasal passage, mouth and throat, contributes to the higher incidence
of such diseases in winter. A pipe, especially its stem, cools down the smoke
before it reaches your mouth...the longer, the cooler. The bowl and the stem
trap tar, which condensates along their walls. The sticky tar in turn traps
some ash...especially when you keep the mouthpiece elevated above the level of
the bowl. Scrape off this tar regularly, not just when clogged.
WATER
PIPES
Water
pipes do cool the smoke, but do not moisten it. Long-stemmed pipes also cool
it, and also do not moisten it. Although smoke bubbles gain no moisture from
the water, the water does trap a goodly amount of bad substances...most
particulate matter (ash), some water-soluble toxins such as hydrogen, cyanide
and hydrocarbons, and some tar. Studies have shown that hot water traps
tar better than cold. Fill your water pipe with hot water, not cold.The
MAPS/NORML study found that water pipes filter out proportionately more
psychoactive THC than tar, which is more THC than anyone had previously
suspected. As a result, water pipe users end up smoking more - thus canceling
out the potential benefit of using a water pipe.
VAPORIZERS
So called vaporizers do not create true
vapor, but instead produce smolder. Paper made from tree pulp burns at temperatures
451 deg. F. Cannabis burns at temperatures above 460 deg. F, but cannabis
volatilizes at temperatures between 266 deg. F and 446 deg. F. Current
model vaporizers come with hefty price tags, but both manufacturers' claims and
user testimonies seem to confirm that smolder delivers the cannabinoids much
more efficiently than does smoke. In theory, you need to use fewer herbs
for the same cannabinoid intake. The right models might potentially save your
lungs. Their main selling point is this: puff for puff, smolder is considered
less harmful than smoke. The cannabis smolder might contain as much as 90%
cannabinoids. That means none of the tar or noxious gases such as benzene,
toluene, and naphthalene and far less carbon monoxide. THC is the crucial cannabinoid
upon which cannabis' psychoactive effects most depend, but most models of
vaporizers deliver an unusually low proportion of the available THC. Most
models instead deliver unusually high proportions of the available cannabinol
(CBN) and cannabidiol (CBD), upon which cannabis' medicinal effects most
depend.
LIGHTERS, MATCHES, CANDLES AND SCREENS
Lighters
fueled by petroleum distillates are subminiature flamethrowers. Your first
toke, when you suck in the fumes from the combustion of butane, is more harmful
than the rest of the joint or bowl. Matches are potentially safer. In theory,
you can wait for the enflamed sulfur tip to burn out before you hold the match
to your med. Beware that first toke! Even if you patiently wait for that sulfur
tip to burn out, because you are nearby you still potentially inhale it as
secondhand smoke. While waiting for that match to burn down, hold it away from
your face. A pipe can multiply the problem. Smoked leisurely, and especially
during solo sessions, marijuana snuffs out frequently, requiring several light
ups per bowl. That's toxic buildup. So here's a tip about sulfur tip matches:
avoid them! Use just one to light a candle. Light a candle, stoke up a
toothpick in its flame, and light with the burning tooth pick. Thin flat
toothpicks burn better than thicker round ones. Screens should never be made
from aluminum foil punctured with pinholes. After just one use, the foil disintegrates
as though into thin air. Where did it go? Your lungs! Screens instead should be
made from other more durable metals such as brass or nongalvanized steel.
Circular screens sold in smoke shops come in various diameters and in meshes of
various densities. But beware a thin layer of an added ingredient that coats
the metal and consists of a plastic which is applied to afford a grip to the
sharp blade that cuts the circles. For this reason, first toast your screen
over your candle before inserting it into the bowl of your pipe.
Be
very careful to:
Keep open flames away from draperies and
other flammable materials.
Extinguish all smoking materials
completely.
Never smoking in bed unless there is no
other option, and only then with Caregiver present.
Keep smoking materials, including matches
and lighters, away from children.