Monday 15 July 2013

Introduction to Spice

Introduction to Spice
Spice products are available in various retail markets, which has attributed to the rapid rise in their popularity. They are readily retailed online, in headshops, gas stations, and other businesses that are in the public eye. The packaging and the marketing schemes associated with the sales of these products are innocuous upon appearance. The containers and packets will display the products intended use as incense, herbal blends, and potpourri, which entail a legal necessity to state "not for human consumption" in order to avoid potential legal liability from users.[1] On the back label of many of these products, herbs and plants will be listed to further incite confidence in the marketing scheme. These usually include: Canavalia maritima, Nymphaea caerulea, Scutellaria nana, Pedicularis densiflora, Leonotis leonurus, Zornia latifolia, Nelumbo nucifera, and Leonurus sibiricus.

The inadvertent and fallible association of Spice-products as a "legal alternative" and "drug-test safe alternative" to cannabis have given these products a grey-market appeal and a stark rise in popularity among drug tested cannabis users. However, in recent years, due to changes in state law and federal laws, the products have lost legal status in different stages. In the evolution of this new synthetic drug phenomena, these have been loosely referred to as "generations" or "waves" in the product lines due to the rapid removal and reintroduction of the products in retail settings, and the products have continued to evolve as laws change in country, states, and regions throughout the world. The first generation of synthetic cannabinoids included the brand known as "Spice." In the consideration of current legality, these products are in their "third generation" and quickly evolving to a "fourth generation" to maintain legal standing in the face of recent legislation throughout the world. In the consideration of drug testing, these companies are currently able to screen for first and second generation products rapidly.Spice Blends

The primary constituents of the first wave of spice products included: Spice Silver, Spice Gold, Spice Diamond, Yucatan Fire, K2 (and variations), Happy Shaman Herbs, and Smoke. The first products of Spice brand contained the C8 homologues such as CP-47,497 and the aminoalkylindole JWH-018. These potent cannabimimetics were discovered as the culprits of the pharmacological effects as the research done on these chemicals have proven them to be full agonist of both the CB1 and CB2 cannabinoid receptors. Within a few years of production, these chemicals were soon accompanied by many others readily available to replace chemicals deemed illegal throughout the years.

"Spice" products were quickly produced into spin-off variations. Retailers carried their own regional brands along side of popular ones. These retailers evolved due to the popularity of these products. The market shifted into private gas stations, which expose underage people inadvertently. With the popularity of these products quickly rising and problems beginning to surface, dangerous notions have started to form about the drug and its chemical make-up. Due to the highly unspecific nature of the chemicals contained, the unresearched nature of the chemicals, and the highly variable implementation onto the herbal blends, the products have an inherent dangers that have become a reality in many instances. Medical emergencies and poison control center alerts have increased dramatically in the recent years with "Spice"-type products. This fact has come to public light with the many instances of medical emergencies and attributed deaths blamed on the "Spice"-products. With minors having access in many instances to these products, more negative media has been given to these products. As more research is done, credence has been given to the inherit dangers of the unresearched chemicals.


Spice as a brand
Spice was the first commercial brand of synthetic marijuana that went on sale in Europe in 2004, manufactured by a company called The Psyche Deli in London, UK. The Psyche Deli was not willing to directly ship to the US at the time, so it was a difficult to find this brand of synthetic cannabinoid blends in the US. The brand was more common to the European market, but the "K2" brand was surging in popularity in the US soon after.

Working largely through intermediaries, online and in person, they give only a website address on their products. The site has now disappeared, but official company records show that Psyche Deli does exist. Its two shareholders and directors are Richard Creswell and Paul Galbraith. The scant and tardy accounts give some idea of the size and growth of the business: assets rose from £65,000 in 2006 to £899,000 in 2007. More recently, the Psyche Deli has been sold to a Dutch “head shop”, De Sjamaan; the owners have moved to the Netherlands, too.

In the peak of popularity in 2009, the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) of Vauxhall, London sent the Psyche Deli a letter in regards to their product requiring a license to be filed for. Regardless, sales continued with no signs of enforcement. This required the UK government to eventually consider banning the chemicals used in these products.

For further information on the origin of the Spice brand, please visit this Financial Times article outlining the history along with interviews from people involved.

Commonly known products of Spice were Spice Gold, Spice Arctic, and Spice Diamond.

Spice as a category of drugs
Note: This Wiki is written for the general term of "branded herbal blend products." The "Spice as a Brand" covers the specifics of the brand. The rest of the article, unless otherwise specified, refers to the general products available on the market and not Psyche Deli's Spice Brand Herbal Blends specifically.

"Spice" primarily falls under the category of synthetic cannabinoids as the lacing ingredient in the herbal blends. The synthetic cannabinoids include many different drugs of various types and structure. They are agonist capable of binding to the CB1 and/or CB2 receptors of the brain. It is attributed to being an "herbal product" based on the marketing by the companies, but the "Spice" drugs should be known specifically as a designer drug using research chemicals known as synthethic cannabinoids to generate the desired effects. These chemicals are many and vary greatly among products of brands (and even the same brands contain different blends). One blend may contain many chemicals, so the user must be aware of this. The user must also be aware of the consideration that potency and consistency is highly variable among brands, packs, and even down to the material within the package.


Producing/Growing Spice
In the production of Spice-type products, a synthetic compound is usually added to the smoke-able plant matter by either soaking it through spray and/or by evaporation. Both of these processes can deposit variable quantities of the target compound onto the plant matter due to variations in atmospheric pressure, humidity, temperature, and surface area exposed. This leads to some batches having very little active compound, while others have high dosages capable of creating an overdose condition. These areas of high concentration are known as "hotspots," and they can be very dangerous to the user. Some medical incidents regarding spice-type products have been attributed to hot-spots in the material. The user makes an assumption that dosages are typical between packages (or brands); thereby, incidentally creating an overdose situation from using the same relative weight in plant material without acknowledging the potential of higher concentrations.

Other important factors of concern in production are the improper removal of solvents and usage of acetone could lead to negative impacts on the user's health. It is important to realize the processes of dissolving, volumetric dosing, and distribution onto the plant material is a sensitive operation that requires a competent individual in chemistry. Recent products have been developed and produced by entrepreneurs looking to make money from the rising popularity of the products, and this introduces a lack of quality and safety on the end of the producer. It is important for users to recognize the potential danger in this. The requirement of knowledge to produce these products is light; therefore, allowing many unqualified individuals to enter the market with potentially dangerous products.

The typical plant materials are chosen based on ability to smoke and economics for the producer.


Forms of Spice
Spice is usually considered as a smoke-able blend of plant matter that has been coated with synthetic cannibanoids, or a combination of these substances. Different varieties of "Spice" are sold under various labels such as K2, Spice, Zombie Killer, Funky Green Stuff, Golden Buddha, K3, etc. Each Spice can have markedly different effects, even different packages of the same label, as different chemicals are used, having variable concentrations. Although there are numerous different kinds of Spice, they are all usually manufactured to produce the same sedating effects of cannabinoids.

Included in the new forms of spice are E-Cigarette cartomizers and E-liquid. Spice is also available as pre-packaged joints in certain product lines. Some producers also sell the alkaloids in powder form straight to the consumer in packages.




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