NaturalNews) A new product is being sold in convenience stores, smoke  shops, and other places around the country called "Spice" or "K2." It`s  sold as an incense, but is considered a marijuana alternative to many -  who smoke it as if it were cannabis. While it claims to be natural and  made of only herbs, the concoction is actually a lot less than natural.  These are synthetic compounds made in laboratories by Big Pharma to  mimic THC.
These products have been on the market for some time  in Europe, though they are now banned in several countries, but have  only recently arrived in North America. They`ve been making headlines  recently as various jurisdictions consider their legality.
So What`s Really in Spice/K2?
The  packets sold all have ingredients lists that include many herbs such as  Baybean or Siberian Motherwort (among others). These lists of  ingredients, however, are not exhaustive; as anything not sold for human  consumption is not required to list all ingredients. The active  ingredient that gives the Spice its marijuana-like high is a synthetic  THC. Most often, this is a compound called JWH-018, though in Germany  many packets have used another called CP-47,497.
These are  synthetic THC chemicals made in laboratories, originally, for use in  cannabinoid receptor testing. JWH-018 is one of over a hundred synthetic  THC compounds created by Clemson University organic chemist Professor  John W. Huffman for use as an in-vitro (non-human/animal) reaction test  for the CB1 and CB2 receptors. CP-47,497 was made in Europe by Pfizer  for similar use.
CB1 and CB2 are receptors in the human body`s  nervous system that respond to cannabinoids, both from marijuana and  from those naturally made by most mammals. These receptors respond to  types of THC in  different ways. CB1 is where most psychoactive reactions are thought to  take place while CB2 is believed to be where reactions to inflammation  and pain reduction happen. Naturally-occurring cannabis plants generally  affect both receptors about equally.
What Do These Synthetic THCs Do?
Users  of the drugs usually report a high similar to that received when  smoking marijuana purchased on the street. The high is not as  long-lasting as the real thing, however, which prompts many to continue  using it to prolong the effects. This is what likely leads to a buildup  of negative reactions.
The trouble is that both JWH-018 and  CP-47,497 were both created in the lab for use in laboratory testing;  and nothing more. They have never been tested in humans and were never  meant to be.
Many doctors are concerned and have seen patients in  emergency rooms with various symptoms that would normally be attributed  to a caffeine overdose or the use of psychoactive uppers like  methamphetamine or cocaine. One doctor in Utah says that when school  started, he began seeing patients who were adversely affected by Spice  and K2. Symptoms include both over-stimulation (high heart rates,  shallow breathing) and psychosis such as paranoia and hearing voices.
What NaturalNews Readers Should Note
The  legality or the use of the drug aside, the real object of note for  NaturalNews readers is that the active ingredients in Spice and K2,  whatever the label says, are anything but natural. These are synthetic  compounds made in laboratories by Big Pharma to mimic THC. They were  never made or tested for human consumption.
Spice from Big Pharma: Find out the Truth about Legal Marijuana
 
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