Activity Stream
227,828 MEMBERS
1841 ONLINE
greengrassforums On YouTube Subscribe to our Newsletter greengrassforums On Twitter greengrassforums On Facebook greengrassforums On Google+
banner1

Page 3 of 4 FirstFirst 1234 LastLast
Results 21 to 30 of 36
  1.     
    #21
    Senior Member

    This statement says that when you're stoned, your brain neurons work at light speed.

    I bet anything a hippy scientist wrote that

  2.     
    #22
    Senior Member

    This statement says that when you're stoned, your brain neurons work at light speed.

    NEUROBIOLOGY: ON MARIJUANA CANNABINOIDS
    The drug "marijuana" is derived from the hemp plant Cannabis
    sativa. The parts of the plant vary in potency, the resinous
    exudate of the flowering tops of the female plant the most
    potent, providing "hashish" and "charas". Next in potency are the
    dried leaves and flowering shoots of the female plant (providing
    "bhang"), and the resinous mass from small leaves of
    inflorescence (providing "ganja"). The drug is usually inhaled by
    smoking, with marijuana "joints" containing approximately 500
    milligrams of marijuana, which in turn contains approximately 5
    to 15 milligrams of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC).
    With moderate dosage, marijuana produces mild euphoria
    followed by sleepiness. In the acute state, the user has an
    altered time perception, less inhibited emotions, psychomotor
    problems, and impaired immediate memory. High doses produce
    transient effects resembling psychosis. The drug frequently
    aggravates existing mental illness, adversely affects motor
    performance, and slows the learning process in children. Studies
    of long-term effects have conclusively demonstrated abnormalities
    in the lungs, laryngitis, rhinitis, and chronic obstructive
    pulmonary disease. Chronic usage has resulted in depression of
    plasma testosterone levels and reduced sperm counts. Abnormal
    menstruation and failure to ovulate have occurred in some female
    users. Sudden withdrawal produces insomnia, nausea, muscle pain
    (myalgia), and irritability. In general, marijuana is a potent
    psychoactive drug acting on the central nervous system and
    producing both acute and chronic neurophysiological effects.
    The most important neuroactive chemical ingredients in
    marijuana are the lipophilic cannabinoids, especially delta-9-
    tetrahydrocannabinol. Cannabinoids are believed to act at several
    specific cannabinoid receptors in the brain. When a human inhales
    or ingests marijuana, the liver transforms it into a number of
    metabolites, the most important of which is 11-hydroxy-delta-9-
    tetrahydrocannabinol, which has effects identical to those of the
    parent compound. 11-hydroxy-delta-9-THC is in turn converted to
    more polar and inactive metabolites which are excreted in urine.
    Since certain cannabinoids are already present in the
    nervous system without input of any drug, cannabinoids need to be
    categorized as "exogenous" (from outside) versus "endogenous"
    (from inside).
    In this context, the term "G-proteins" refers to a family of
    signal-coupling proteins that act as intermediaries between
    activated cell receptors and effectors, for example, the
    transduction of hormonal signals from the cell surface to the
    cell interior. The G-protein is apparently embedded in the cell
    membrane with parts exposed on the outside surface and inside
    surface. The outside moiety is activated by the "first messenger"
    (e.g., a hormone), and the inside moiety activates a "second
    messenger", the G-protein thus acting as a trans-membrane signal
    transducer.
    "Neurotransmitters" are chemical substances released at the
    terminals of nerve axons in response to the propagation of an
    impulse to the end of that axon. The neurotransmitter substance
    diffuses into the synapse, the junction between the presynaptic
    nerve ending and the postsynaptic neuron, and at the membrane of
    the postsynaptic neuron the transmitter substance interacts with
    a receptor. Depending on the type of receptor, the result may be
    an excitatory or an inhibitory effect on the postsynaptic nerve
    cell.
    "GABA" is gamma-amino butyric acid, a neurotransmitter
    substance. The term "GABA receptor" refers to any of several
    membrane proteins that bind GABA and mediate its effects as an
    inhibitory neurotransmitter.
    In this context, the term "depolarization" refers to a
    reduction in the potential difference across the cell membrane.
    The neuron action potential involves not only a transient
    depolarization of the membrane but also a transient reversal of
    polarity of the potential difference, the potential difference
    across the neuron membrane during an action potential changing
    from approximately -60 millivolts (inside negative) to
    approximately +40 millivolts.
    The "hippocampus" is a brain cortex structure in the medial
    part of the temporal lobe. In humans, among other functions, the
    hippocampus is apparently involved in short-term memory. Analysis
    of the neurological correlates of learning behavior in the rat
    indicates that the hippocampus is also involved in memory in that
    species. Nerve cells in rat brain slices remain active in vitro
    in appropriate solutions for up to 24 hours, and such slices are
    convenient tissues for experiments. "Hippocampal pyramidal
    neurons" are a specific type of nerve cell in the hippocampus.
    The term "retrograde signaling" refers to neural information
    transmission in a direction opposite to the primary signal
    direction. In this context, the term refers to signaling from
    postsynaptic neuron to presynaptic neuron. In general, retrograde
    signaling in neural systems is usually part of a negative
    feedback process.
    In general, an "interneuron" is any neuron that branches
    locally to innervate other neurons.
    In general, in this context, an "agonist" is any substance
    that binds to and activates a receptor.
    ... ... R.I. Wilson and R.A. Nicoll (University of California San
    Francisco, US) report a study of the action of endogenous
    cannabinoids, the authors making the following points:
    1) The authors point out that marijuana affects brain
    function primarily by activating the G-protein-coupled
    cannabinoid receptor-1 (CB1), which is genetically expressed
    throughout the brain at high levels. Two endogenous lipids,
    anandamide and 2-arachidonylglycerol (2-AG), have been identified
    as cannabinoid receptor-1 ligands, and depolarized hippocampal
    neurons have been shown to rapidly release both anandamide and 2-
    AG in a calcium-dependent manner. In the hippocampus, cannabinoid
    receptor-1 is expressed mainly by GABA-mediated inhibitory
    interneurons, where cannabinoid receptor-1 apparently clusters on
    axon terminals of such interneurons. A synthetic cannabinoid
    receptor-1 agonist has been demonstrated to depress GABA release
    from hippocampal slices, which suggests that the function of
    endogenous cannabinoids released by depolarized hippocampal
    neurons might be to reduce GABA release (down-regulate GABA
    release).
    2) The authors report that their experiments indicate that
    the transient suppression of GABA-mediated transmission that
    follows depolarization of hippocampal pyramidal neurons is
    mediated by retrograde signaling through release of endogenous
    cannabinoids. Signaling by the endocannabinoid system thus
    represents a mechanism by which neurons can communicate backwards
    across synapses to modulate their inputs. The authors suggest
    this study represents the first identification of a physiological
    process mediated by endogenous brain cannabinoids. Exogenous
    cannabinoids such as marijuana may destroy the information
    contained in endogenous cannabinoid feedback loops and thus
    promote a more random pattern of synaptic modification.
    -----------
    R.I. Wilson and R.A. Nicoll: Endogenous cannabinoids mediate
    retrograde signalling at hippocampal synapses.
    (Nature 29 Mar 01 410:588)
    QY: Roger A. Nicoll: [email protected]
    -------------------
    Summary by SCIENCE-WEEK http://scienceweek.com 20Jul01
    For more information: http://scienceweek.com/swfr.htm
    -------------------
    Related Background:
    ON THE MECHANISM OF PAIN MODULATION BY CANNABINOIDS
    In general, the clinical entity "hyperalgesia" (sometimes known
    as "hyperalgia") is a heightened sensitivity to painful stimuli.
    Cannabinoids are derivatives or preparations from the plant
    Cannabis sativa (the marijuana plant), a group of a dozen
    compounds chemically related to cannabinol, including delta-9-
    tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), and the cannabinoid receptor is the
    binding site for the psychoactive component of marijuana, as well
    as for anandamide, the endogenous physiological ligand. Anand-
    amide is known to modulate the pain pathway, but the mechanisms
    are not clear. ... ... Richardson et al (3 authors at Univ. of
    Minnesota Minneapolis, US) now report studies in animal models
    that indicate that hyperalgesia may be linked to a faulty
    cannabinoid system in the spinal cord. The authors suggest that
    endogenous cannabinoids attenuate pain by preventing the release
    of glutamate from presynaptic terminals of neurons that transmit
    pain messages to the spinal cord.
    -----------
    QY: Jenelle D. Richardson, Harvard Univ. Medical School, Dept.
    Neurobiology 617-432-1550.
    (Chem. & Eng. News 19 Jan 98) (Science-Week 30 Jan 98)
    For more information: http://scienceweek.com/swfr.htm

  3.   Advertisements

  4.     
    #23
    Senior Member

    This statement says that when you're stoned, your brain neurons work at light speed.

    At the beginning of that, I thought some of those were disproven. Like the low-sperm count, maybe? Like I'm not sure about the ovulation, but I'd thought, well, here...

    Studies
    of long-term effects have conclusively demonstrated abnormalities
    in the lungs, laryngitis, rhinitis, and chronic obstructive
    pulmonary disease. Chronic usage has resulted in depression of
    plasma testosterone levels and reduced sperm counts. Abnormal
    menstruation and failure to ovulate have occurred in some female
    users

    That's the part. Again. This story was done 2001, 1998.

  5.     
    #24
    Senior Member

    This statement says that when you're stoned, your brain neurons work at light speed.

    you been smokin that hippy lettuce again, boy?

  6.     
    #25
    Senior Member

    This statement says that when you're stoned, your brain neurons work at light speed.

    I ain't your boy, child. Well, if you'd like.

  7.     
    #26
    Senior Member

    This statement says that when you're stoned, your brain neurons work at light speed.

    Holy crap I always felt more intelligent when I was high. Not only that but I felt more creative and felt like my neurons were moving at light speed.

  8.     
    #27
    Senior Member

    This statement says that when you're stoned, your brain neurons work at light speed.

    Yeah, those neurons, they'll get you working.

  9.     
    #28
    Senior Member

    This statement says that when you're stoned, your brain neurons work at light speed.

    i smell it on you, i smell the evil green demon on your sweatshirt. why must you break your mother's and my heart...

  10.     
    #29
    Senior Member

    This statement says that when you're stoned, your brain neurons work at light speed.

    No, I'm not wearing a sweatshirt. My mom would be proud, but I always thought I was the apple of your eye, guess I'm just breaking your heart. :stoned:

  11.     
    #30
    Senior Member

    This statement says that when you're stoned, your brain neurons work at light speed.

    Beachguy, you broke me heart in the atheism thread. You're breaking everyone's heart today it seems.

Page 3 of 4 FirstFirst 1234 LastLast

Similar Threads

  1. Replies: 2
    Last Post: 04-21-2013, 09:59 PM
  2. Replies: 21
    Last Post: 08-06-2011, 05:32 PM
  3. Marijuana-like brain chemicals work as antidepressant
    By EzRyder in forum Medicinal Cannabis and Health
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 11-14-2007, 04:29 AM
  4. Marijuana-like brain chemicals work as antidepressant
    By couch-potato in forum Medicinal Cannabis and Health
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 11-06-2007, 04:50 AM
  5. Replies: 9
    Last Post: 11-18-2004, 07:02 PM
Amount:

Enter a message for the receiver:
BE SOCIAL
GreenGrassForums On Facebook