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of Fibre HempPossibly
the most closely guarded secret in North America today is the difference in THC
content between fiber hemp and drug-type hemp. The secret is so well guarded in
the US that the enforcement officers at the State, Federal, and local levels are
mostly ignorant of it. Whenever anyone points out this obvious discrepancy the
keepers of orthodoxy point to some sinister plot involving legalization. The following
articles address this issue. The
important points are: 1)
Fiber hemp is extremely low in THC. 2)
Cannabidiol, CBD, a precursor chemical in the bio-synthetic pathway of Cannabis
sativa L., tends to exist in an inverse relationship with THC. In fiber hemp where
THC levels are very low, CBD levels are high. There is a third type of hemp, intermediate,
where THC and CBD levels are both high. 3)
The THC/CBD levels are genetically controlled factors. Although environmental,
soil, and plant density conditions can effect the THC level to a certain degree,
the genetic factors are most important. French monoecious cultivars used for paper
such as Fibrimon 56 even if grown in optimal resinous drug producing conditions
would still be useless for smoking or drug use. (You can't make a silk purse out
of a sow's ear!) Gilbert
Fournier has said even if fiber hemp were...."abundantly widespread, gone
wild, naturalised, it still would pose no danger." (Fournier, 1979) International
agreements and standards recommend a level of THC in the fiber strains of less
than 0.3% THC. (DeMeijer 1992) Most varieties are even less than this. The Le
Mans Hemp Institute has even developed a Cannabigerol, CBG, dominant strain with
0.001% THC. Fournier, 1987) (Recent evidence indicates that the Le Mans research
team has successfully eliminated THC from this strain.) By contrast notoriously
weak U.S. government supplied 'marijuana cigarettes for the nine current legal
medical recipients range in potency from 2.1-2.7% THC. (Randall, 1991) Average
'marijuana' seized by authorities in the U.S. is about 3-3.5% THC. (Potency Monitoring
Project, 1993) Some indoor strains rank as high as 10% THC. While this selective
breeding for high THC Cannabis was going on by many illicit growers,European Fiber
Research Stations were breeding THC contents lower. (Le Mans Hemp Institute, France,
All-Union Bast Fiber Institute, Gluckhov, Ukraine) How
much fiber hemp would a person have to consume to get a psycho-active high? Gilbert
Fournier quotes L.E. Hollister (1971) as saying it would take at least 10 mg.
of THC in order to get...." a minimal inebriant effect, one would have to
smoke all at once 50-100 cigarettes of fiber hemp in order to obtain this effect."
(Fournier, 1979) (This would be from the leaves and flowering tops of French monoecious
hemp gathered at anthesis.) There is essentially no THC in the stalk, seeds, or
roots. (Beutler, 1978) There is usually less THC in the leaves and flowering tops
of these fiber hemp cultivars than there is alcohol in non-alcoholic beer. Cannabidiol,
CBD, is a very interesting substance. According to Karniol (1974) it tends to
block the psycho-active effects of THC. This would make fiber hemp doubly useless
for drug effects. CBD as a non-psychoactive cannabinoid appears to be helpful
for many medical conditions....as an anti-convulsant for Epileptics, (Cunha, 1980)
Dystonic movement disorders, ( Consroe, 1986) Huntington's Disease, (Sandyk, 1986)
as an anti-inflammatory, (Formukong, 1988) as an aid to chronic insomnia, (Carlini,
1979) and as an anti-psychotic in rats with no adverse side effects, (Zuardi,
1991). Karniol (1973) has found that CBD tends to enhance some of the effects
from THC and block others in rats. It seems to enhance some of the medical uses
of THC, which explains somewhat why the synthetic THC pill taken alone is of such
marginal use compared to 'marijuana' the whole plant substance. (Randall, 1991)
Formukong and Evans reveal...."our results would suggest that cultivation
of Cannabis plants rich in CBD and other phenolic substances would be useful not
only as fiber producing plants but also for medicinal purposes in the treatment
of certain inflammatory disorders." (Formukong, 1988) Much
of the research and development into the medical uses of 'marijuana' usually conclude
with its unacceptable psycho-active side effects. Many drug companies in their
research have tried unsuccessfully to separate the medicinal from the psycho-active
effects of Cannabis. (Mechoulam, 1987) Here is a 'low-tech' way of doing this:
grow low THC high CBD fiber hemp. The possibility of using the leaves and flowering
tops from fiber hemp as a useful medical by product should be investigated. If
CBD turns out to be therapeutically useful, this could provide added economic
benefit to the development of fiber hemp. Beutler,
John A., and Der Marderosian, Ara H., 1978. Chemotaxonomy of Cannabis I. Cross-breeding
Between Cannabis Sativa and C. Ruderalis, with Analysis of Cannabinoid Content.
Economic Botany Vol. 32 (4) 387-394. Carlini,
E.A., Masur, et al, 1979. Possivel Efeito Hipnotico do Cannabidiol no ser Humano.
(In Portuguese) Ciencia E Cultura 3l (3) 315-322. Consroe,
et al, 1986. Open Label Evaluation of Cannabidiol in Dystonic Movement Disorders.
International Journal of Neuroscience. Vol. 30 277-282. Cunha,
J.M., et al, 1980. Chronic Administration of Cannabidiol to Healthy Volunteers
and Epileptic Patients. Pharmacology . 21 175-185. De
Meijer, E.P.M., et al, 1992. Characterisation of Cannabis accessions with regard
to cannabinoid content in relation to other plant characters. Euphytica. 62 187-200. Formukong,
E.A., Evans, A.T., and Evans, F.J., 1988. Analgesic and Anti-inflammatory Activity
of Constituents of Cannabis Sativa L. Inflammation. Vol 12 (4) 361-371. Fournier,
G., Paris, M.R., 1979. Le Chanvre Papetier (Cannabis Sativa L.,) Cultive en France:
Le Point sur ses Constituants. (In French). Plantes Medicinales et Phytotherapie.
Vol 13 (2) 116-121. Fournier,
Gilbert, et al, 1987. Identification of a New Chemotype in Cannabis sativa: Cannabigerol
dominant Plants, Biogenetic and Agronomic Prospects. Planta Medica. 53 (3) 277-280. Hollister,
L.E., 1971. Man and Marijuana. Science. 172. 21-29. Karniol,
I.G., Carlini, E.A., 1973. Pharmacological Interaction between Cannabidiol and
Delta 9-Tetrahydrocannabinol. Psychopharmacologia. Vol 33. 53-70. Karniol,
I.G., Shirakawa, I., et al, 1974. Cannabidiol interferes with the effects of delta
9-tetrahydrocannabinol in man. European Journal of Pharmacy. Vol 28. 172-177. Mechoulam,
Rafael, and Feigenbaum, 1987. Towards Cannabinoid Drugs. Progress in Medicinal
Chemistry. Vol. 24. 159-207. Randall,
Robert, ed., 1991. Marijuana, Medicine and the Law, Vol. II. Sandyk,
Consroe, et al, 1986. Effects of Cannabidiol in Huntington's Disease. Neurology.
Vol.36 (Suppl. 1) 342. Zuardi,
A.W., et al,1991. Effects of cannabidiol in animal models predictive of anti-psychotic
activity. Psychopharmacology. 104. 260-264. >>>It
is now believed that the conversion from CBD to THC is controlled by a special
enzyme. It is of course still a genetically controlled factor. |