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05-24-2009, 01:36 PM #1OPJunior Member
Trying my alcohol talk again
First off, moderator I am a Chemistry graduate from UNC Wilmington with a concentration in Biochemistry, along with minors in Physics and Mathematics. I plan on attending UNC Medical School beginning fall of 2010 after I get some experience under my belt in the medical field by working at the local hospital under the oncology department. I also did some research on THC solubilities for my senior project since it was focused on organic reactions. This being said, don't play this off as some little stoner that doesn't know what in the world they are talking about.
Extension on logical reasoning:
THC will react more readily with alcohol than fat until the temperature of the alcohol approaches the evaporation point of the specific alcohol, which is respectively greater than human blood temperature which is carrying the alcohol to the fatty tissues. (It takes much longer for fat to break down THC and bond with it, which is why people enjoy smoking THC so the high lasts longer)
Though your blood alcohol content may be low, this is actually insufficient information in concluding how much alcohol actually gets to your fatty tissue. It is dependent on many variables... blood pressure, kidney function, liver function, heart rate, etc. It has been estimated that alcohol will effect up to 75% of human organs and tissue before the liver can fully "cleanse" the blood, though there is no real way to test this as it relies on so many variables.
The "hole" that you might be able to place of does not come in chemical reactions, but in the fact that alcohol doesn't absorb into fatty cells. It does however, run through the bloodstream that runs through fatty tissue, and thus theoretically should be able to react with some of the THC in the cells. The reply to my previous thread that alcohol and THC will have organic reactions based on organic acids is true, but allows for numerous reactions and synthesis based on the chemical formation of both alcohols and THC. This allows numerous possible organic reactions as the alcohol passes through the blood stream and along the fatty cells.
This is where I am asking for opinions. It has nothing to do with the organic solubility as it has already been proven that THC is more soluble in alcohol than in fats at lower temperatures (low in this case being chemically or <100 F) or the BAC seeing that even if you only consumed a cup of alcohol, which isn't difficult with many liquors, you are still passing 3/4 of a cup of alcohol through your tissue (if the 75% approximation is correct). Which is enough to pull tons of THC, not all, from your cells.
I am looking more for biological holes than chemical, though if you have good reasoning I would be happy to hear it. Biological downfalls like possible enzyme problems, better liver function approximations, blood flow misdirection, etc. would be far greater and allowing me to move on from this theory than... no the BAC is too low or no it is organically soluble and bonds at numerous points in THC... which I know. I am not talking about changing the THC in the body, I am talking about removing it through the liver, kidneys, and bladder along with the alcohol it bonds to.
I am always happy to admit when I am wrong when someone proves it wrong, but to throw out elementary chemistry and then lock the thread because you assume that you know more being a weed forum operator (I don't know your educational background so who knows) is a little strange. Didn't even give me time to respond to my last post before you shut it down.waddlecaudle Reviewed by waddlecaudle on . Trying my alcohol talk again First off, moderator I am a Chemistry graduate from UNC Wilmington with a concentration in Biochemistry, along with minors in Physics and Mathematics. I plan on attending UNC Medical School beginning fall of 2010 after I get some experience under my belt in the medical field by working at the local hospital under the oncology department. I also did some research on THC solubilities for my senior project since it was focused on organic reactions. This being said, don't play this off as some Rating: 5
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