Difference: Obra59 ( vs. 1)

Revision 118 Feb 2010 - JoenioCosta

Line: 1 to 1
Added:
>
>
META TOPICPARENT name="Biblioteca"
<-- 
  • Set EDIT_TEMPLATE = editform
  • Set CSS =
.nav3, .sidebar {
display
none important;
} #conteudo {
width
720px important;
background
white;
} #lista_redes table td {
font-size
13px;
}

#obra-autor{ font-weight:bold;

font-size
14px;
position
absolute;
top
335px;
} .noticia-autor{
display
none important
} table {
width
720px;
} td,th,table{ border: 1px solid #CCC; font-size: 14px; background: white; } td {
padding
5px;
} th * {
text-decoration
none important;
color
black important;
font-size
12px;
} th {
text-align
left;
padding-left
5px;
background
#EEE;
} #informacoes-extras td {
padding
1px;
} h1.content1-pagetitle {
width
100%;
}

-->

« Voltar   Imprimir

Autor Ano Local de Publicação Local Tema
GIERINGER, Dale; LAURENT, Joseph St.; GOODRICH, Scott 2004    

Instituição de Origem Estado Instituição Instituição Responsável
Journal of Cannabis Terapeutics   The UK Cannabis Internet Activist

Formato da Obra Formato Disponível Número de Páginas Idioma
Artigo em Periódico   21 Inglês

Resumo
Cannabis vaporization is a technology designed to deliver inhaled cannabinoids while avoiding the respiratory hazards of smoking by heating cannabis to a temperature where therapeutically active cannabinoid vapors are produced, but below the point of combustion where noxious pyrolytic byproducts are formed. This study was designed to evaluate the efficacy of an herbal vaporizer known as the Volcano®, produced by Storz & Bickel GmbH? &Co. KG, Tuttlingen, Germany (http://www.storz-bickel.com). Three 200 mg samples of standard NIDA cannabis were vaporized at temperatures of 155°-218°C. For comparison, smoke from combusted samples was also tested. The study consisted of two phases: (1) a quantitative analysis of the solid phase of the vapor using HPLC-DAD-MS (High Performance Liquid Chromatograph-Diode Array-Mass Spectrometry) to determine the amount of cannabinoids delivered; (2) a GC/MS (Gas Chromatograph/Mass Spectrometer) analysis of the gas phase to analyze the vapor for a wide range of toxins, focusing on pyrene and other polynuculear aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). The HPLC analysis of the vapor found that the Volcano delivered 36%-61% of the THC in the sample, a delivery efficiency that compares favorably to that of marijuana cigarettes. The GC/MS analysis showed that the gas phase of the vapor consisted overwhelmingly of cannabinoids, with trace amounts of three other compounds. In contrast, over 111 compounds were identified in the combusted smoke, including several known PAHs. The results indicate that vaporization can deliver therapeutic doses of cannabinoids with a drastic reduction in pyrolytic smoke compounds. Vaporization therefore appears to be an attractive alternative to smoked marijuana for future medical cannabis studies.

Palavras Chave Marijuana, cannabis,vaporization,smoking,harm reduction
Link http://www.ukcia.org/research/CannabisVaporizer.pdf
Referência para Citação GIERINGER, D. Et Al. Cannabis Vaporizer Combines Efficient Delivery of THC with effective Suppression of Pyrolytic Compounds. Journal of Cannabis Terapeutics, Vol. 4(1), 2004.
Observação  

META FORM name="WebObraForm"
FORM FIELD Título Ttulo Cannabis Vaporizer Combines Efficient Delivery of THC with effective Suppression of Pyrolytic Compounds
FORM FIELD Autor Autor GIERINGER, Dale; LAURENT, Joseph St.; GOODRICH, Scott
FORM FIELD Ano Ano 2004
FORM FIELD FormatoDaObra FormatoDaObra Artigo em Periódico
FORM FIELD Instituição de Origem InstituiodeOrigem? Journal of Cannabis Terapeutics
FORM FIELD Local de Publicação LocaldePublicao?
FORM FIELD Instituição Responsável InstituioResponsvel? The UK Cannabis Internet Activist
FORM FIELD FormatoDisponivel FormatoDisponivel
FORM FIELD Número de Páginas NmerodePginas? 21
FORM FIELD Idioma Idioma Inglês
FORM FIELD Palavras Chave PalavrasChave? Marijuana, cannabis,vaporization,smoking,harm reduction
FORM FIELD Resumo Resumo Cannabis vaporization is a technology designed to deliver inhaled cannabinoids while avoiding the respiratory hazards of smoking by heating cannabis to a temperature where therapeutically active cannabinoid vapors are produced, but below the point of combustion where noxious pyrolytic byproducts are formed. This study was designed to evaluate the efficacy of an herbal vaporizer known as the Volcano®, produced by Storz & Bickel GmbH? &Co. KG, Tuttlingen, Germany (http://www.storz-bickel.com). Three 200 mg samples of standard NIDA cannabis were vaporized at temperatures of 155°-218°C. For comparison, smoke from combusted samples was also tested. The study consisted of two phases: (1) a quantitative analysis of the solid phase of the vapor using HPLC-DAD-MS (High Performance Liquid Chromatograph-Diode Array-Mass Spectrometry) to determine the amount of cannabinoids delivered; (2) a GC/MS (Gas Chromatograph/Mass Spectrometer) analysis of the gas phase to analyze the vapor for a wide range of toxins, focusing on pyrene and other polynuculear aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). The HPLC analysis of the vapor found that the Volcano delivered 36%-61% of the THC in the sample, a delivery efficiency that compares favorably to that of marijuana cigarettes. The GC/MS analysis showed that the gas phase of the vapor consisted overwhelmingly of cannabinoids, with trace amounts of three other compounds. In contrast, over 111 compounds were identified in the combusted smoke, including several known PAHs. The results indicate that vaporization can deliver therapeutic doses of cannabinoids with a drastic reduction in pyrolytic smoke compounds. Vaporization therefore appears to be an attractive alternative to smoked marijuana for future medical cannabis studies.
FORM FIELD Link Link http://www.ukcia.org/research/CannabisVaporizer.pdf
FORM FIELD Referência para Citação RefernciaparaCitao? GIERINGER, D. Et Al. Cannabis Vaporizer Combines Efficient Delivery of THC with effective Suppression of Pyrolytic Compounds. Journal of Cannabis Terapeutics, Vol. 4(1), 2004.
FORM FIELD Observação Observao
 
This site is powered by the TWiki collaboration platformCopyright &© by the contributing authors. All material on this collaboration platform is the property of the contributing authors.
Ideas, requests, problems regarding TWiki? Send feedback