What is cannabis?
What are the active ingredients of cannabis?
Over 60 cannabinoids
active ingredient Delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (delta-9-THC),
What does the amount of active ingredient (THC) depend on?
o Preparation
o Route of administration
o Inactive ingredients altering potency or metabolism
What can create new cannabinoids?
• Burning cannabis, GI digestion & metabolism
What are the forms of cannabis?
• 3 forms of cannabis:
o Marijuana: dried leaves and flowers; usually smoked/baked
o Hashish: dried resin from female plant; usually smoked or baked
o Hash oil*: hashish boiled in alcohol, then residue is filtered & alcohol evaporated
What is the THC content of plants?
What are the uses of Cannabis?
• Historically, hemp has been used for:
o Fibre (e.g. clothes/textiles, paper and rope)
o Oil (lamp oil & food) & as an ingredient in the manufacture of soap, paint and varnish (seeds)
o Medicinal purposes
o Psychoactive properties
What are the synthetic cannabinoids?What are they used for?
o Marinol (dronabinol –THC extracted from cannabis) & Nabilone (Cesamet – entirely synthetic THC): to alleviate nausea & vomiting in people w. cancer undergoing chemo & radiation therapy; anorexia & weight loss assoc. AIDS o Sativex (THC + CBD (+other cannabinoids + non-cannabinoids) extracted from cannabis): neuropathic pain assoc. multiple sclerosis o Epidiolex (CBD extracted from cannabis): “Investigational New Drug” for severe forms of epilepsy in children (incl. QLD govt study at Lady Cilento + NSW clinical trials)
What is the pKa of cannabis?
10.6
What is the absorption of cannabis orally?
Readily absorbed
o Not ionized: THC (weak acid) with a pKa = 10.6
o Lipid soluble: cannabinoids are extremely lipid soluble
o Peak effects: 1-3 hrs>ingestion; effects may last>5hrs
What is oral absorption effected by? What is the difference compared in inhalation?
o Absorption is slow and affected by considerable 1st pass metabolism
o Oral vs. inhalation: 1/3 potency; more likely assoc. vomiting & nausea
What is the absorption of cannabis when inhaled?
Where is cannabis distributed in the body?
How is cannabis excreted ?
* Most metabolism in liver
What is the transformation of Delta-9-THC in liver?
• Delta-9-THC → 11-hydroxy-delta-9-THC → other metabolites (> 100)
o Other metabolites also have effects but most are less lipid solube and more easily excreted
What is the active metabolite of cannabis?
• 11-hydroxy-delta-9-THC (active metabolite)
o More active than delta-9-THC
o Penetrated BBB easier
What is the metabolism of other cannabinoids?
Cannabidiol (CBD) – (20 metabolites)
• Blocks enzyme that metabolizes THC (increased duration of action)
Cannabinol (CBN) – (20 metabolites)
• Increased metabolism of THC
What are the interactions between metabolites in the body?
Possible interaction effects btwn THC, CBN, & CBD to displace THC from blood binding sites (increased amount available for distribution)
How is THC excreted?
THC Phase 1 excretion:
- ½ life ~ 30 min; redistribution effect
Phase 2 excretions
- ½ life ~20-30 hrs; metabolism effect
- Slow metabolism due to lipid solubility and speed that THC is released from fatty tissues
- > Traces of THC can be detected 2-4 weeks> ingestion
- Excreted in faeces (55%) & urine (20%)
- Effects of frequent use on metabolism: unclear
What are the effects of cannabis on receptors?
- Work on second messengers and neuromodulators
What is CB1 and what does cannabis do to effect it?
What is CB2 and what does it effect?
What are endogenous ligands (endocannabinoids)?
What is the function of endocannabinoids?
“relax, eat, sleep, forget & protect”