Toxicant Formation in Dabbing: The Terpene Story

cannabis.pro

aka 420EDC
Accessory Maker
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10.1021/acsomega.7b01130

Abstract

Inhalable, noncombustible cannabis products are playing a central role in the expansion of the medical and recreational use of cannabis. In particular, the practice of “dabbing” with butane hash oil has emerged with great popularity in states that have legalized cannabis. Despite their growing popularity, the degradation product profiles of these new products have not been extensively investigated. The study herein focuses on the chemistry of myrcene and other common terpenes found in cannabis extracts. Methacrolein, benzene, and several other products of concern to human health were formed under the conditions that simulated real-world dabbing. The terpene degradation products observed are consistent with those reported in the atmospheric chemistry literature.

Topics:
Extraction; Organic compounds and Functional groups; Solvation; Toxicology
Introduction
Terpenes and terpenoids are present in such a wide diversity of environments (nature, food, cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, and drugs) that their consequences for inhalation toxicology cannot be ignored. Additionally, their inclusion in flavored electronic cigarettes(1) and ubiquitous presence in inhalable cannabis products are of particular concern. The medicinal and psychoactive effects of cannabis have been proposed to be enhanced by terpenes, a phenomenon known as the “entourage effect”,(2) and these relatively unsubstantiated assertions of benefits have led the cannabis industry to place a heavy emphasis on these aroma compounds.

Terpenoid degradation in the context of cannabis has not been extensively studied;(3, 4) however, it has attracted attention in the context of atmospheric chemistry.(5, 6) For instance, the reactions of terpenoids with O3 and NOx are well-known, but they are not directly applicable to e-cigarettes or inhalable cannabis products. However, these and other studies of pyrolysis and combustion of terpenoids should serve as a starting point toward understanding the reaction pathways in consumer vaporization devices. Despite the growing popularity of flavored e-cigarettes and terpene-enriched cannabis extracts, the chemical profiles of their terpene degradation products have not been evaluated in detail.

Of very recent concern is the practice of dabbing, which has emerged as a dangerous and rapidly growing trend in cannabis consumption. It consists of inhaling the vapors produced by placing a small amount of cannabis extract (a “dab”) on a small heated surface (the “nail”), which is connected to a water pipe.(7) Its delivery of harmfully large amounts cannabinoids(8, 9) represents a potential danger to consumers, but little is known about the toxicants the process may produce.

The principal extract used in dabbing is butane hash oil (BHO). BHO is a resinous, nonpolar extract of the cannabis made using butane as a solvent.(10) BHO has active ingredient (tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) or cannabidiol) contents ranging between 50 and 90%,(8, 11) with terpene content ranging from 0.1 to 34% (unpublished). Myrcene is unequivocally the most abundant terpene in cannabis, followed by limonene, linalool, pinene, caryophyllene, and humulene; however, the plant can contain up to 68 additional terpenic compounds in trace amounts.(12) Additionally, some consumers increase the terpenoid content by dipping BHO in a vial of terpenes prior to use (“terp dipping”).(13)

BHO is made by passing butane over cannabis buds and leaves, and subsequently “purging” the butane from the product under vacuum at room temperature or in an oven. Different nuances in its processing can lead to slightly different consistencies, which take on terms such as shatter, budder, crumble, pull-and-snap, wax, and so on. In all of its forms, the extract is a sticky, resinous substance similar to the oleo-resins of other plants.(14) Because the process does not involve heating the extract to the point that delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinolic acid (THCA, the native form of this substance found in the plant) decarboxylates (unpublished) into the active THC, BHO is not orally active and must be vaporized for the users to achieve its effects.(15)

BHO production started out as a dangerous “backyard-chemist” style operation that is famous for causing numerous explosions and house fires. Through the course of legalization, the production has steadily gained sophistication. The most modern, legal extraction laboratories live up to the OSHA standards with full ventilation and butane recovery. Modern techniques also include steps to “de-wax” the product by dissolving the crude BHO in isopropyl alcohol and chilling in a freezer, and, finally, filtering off the precipitated waxes in a process known as winterization. Many subtleties in its production exist, but many remain secretive due to the highly competitive nature of the cannabis marketplace and the general inability of extract producers to file patents due to the drug’s legal status at the federal level.

In addition to butane extraction, supercritical CO2 extraction has gained traction due to the fact that is does not leave any trace of hydrocarbon solvents in the end product.(16) The cannabis extract made by this method, colloquially known as CO2 oil, has a lesser viscosity than BHO, a property that allows it to be used in vaporizer pens on its own with no cutting agents. The lesser viscosity is due to the fact that the supercritical extraction process requires the product to be first decarboxylated (heating in an oven at 100+ °C),(17) leaving an extract consisting of all THC (an oil at room temperature) and no THCA (a solid at room temperature). CO2 oil is generally more expensive than BHO and mostly present on the market in prefilled vaporizer cartridges and not commonly as a standalone extract for dabbing. Because this extraction method does not leave residual hydrocarbons, it has been named, along with alcohol extracts, as the only allowable medical extracts to be sold under the medical cannabis regulations in New York,(18) Minnesota, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.

According to a recent survey,(11) the main reasons for using dabs are that less material is needed to get the desired effect and a “cleaner high.” Consumers consider dabbing to be a form of vaporization, and, therefore, view it as easier on the lungs than smoking.(19) However, little information exists on the prevalence of dabbing. From 213 BHO extraction laboratories in the 17 states raided in 2014, 2015 saw a steep increase in the number of laboratories raided to 337 in 26 states.(20) An analysis of the Twitter content related to dabs found a greater popularity in the states that have legalized recreational and/or medical cannabis.(21)

Different types of nails, the surface on which vaporization occurs, exist on the market. Use of an electrically controlled nail (“e-nail”) allows temperature control; but, more commonly, users heat the nail (made of titanium, ceramic, or quartz) with a crème brulee torch(22) and have no temperature control. A minority of dabbers use lower temperatures to preserve flavor, whereas a majority use higher temperatures to assure complete vaporization with no wasted material. E-nail users posting online cite a preferred temperature around 710 °F (378 °C), but cite a range from 340–482 °C.(23-25) Raber et al. reported a dabbing temperature of 300 °C, but this was only an (low) estimate. The boiling point of THC has recently been predicted to be ca. 417 °C,(26) but vaporization can occur at temperatures lower than this by the use of a “carb cap” that reduces pressure on its surface during inhalation.(27)

This study is an initial effort toward assessing the safety of dabbing cannabis extracts. Due to the fact that these consist of a complex mixture, we have begun our focus on terpenoids, the component we predict to be the most thermally labile. To study dabbing, we carefully recreated the inhalation topography and temperatures employed by users. The study described herein is the first to investigate the degradation products from dabbing and is focused on the terpene fraction of the extracts used by consumers.
 

KeroZen

Chronic vapaholic
That's what I always suspected. Also similar to the recent wave of articles about e-liquids. It was expected: pyrolysis / thermolysis produces a lot of unwanted byproducts. We need to stay at safe temperatures if we want to minimize this issue as much as possible.

It's a good thing because it's pushing the e-cig world towards more attention to TC vaping mode, which in turn will help develop better mods... which we can hijack to use with our special 510 attachments.

For dabs, it was always clear to me that with such high temperatures and most often no temperature control, bad things were happening at the interface between material and nail. Despite all wishful thinking some people have about the dab "levitating" above the nail surface or whatever sublimation miracle might happen, the temperatures are often much too high to not be a concern.

Flowers feel safer to me. Besides, I tend to see the difference between flowers and dabs to be akin to the difference between snorted cocaine and smoked base / crack. That's my personal opinion of course, but I think it turns the plant from a "soft drug" to something much harder. Not wanting to start a debate on that though nor derail the thread, I'm sure many medical users benefit from the faster intake rate with this method, for recreative use it's another story.
 

Deleted Member 1643

Well-Known Member
GREAT study - glad to finally see some rigorous work. The background information is also very helpful. Learned a lot about dabbing and terpenes.

Keep in mind that the lowest temperature range at which methacrolein was observed centers at 403C - a pretty hot dab. The highest temperature range, below which no benzene was detected, centers at 526C. This temperature is more commonly used for heat-cleaning nails than dabbing.

It's not as safe as breathing air and certainly warrants further study, but IMO, the results can be interpreted as reassuring for terpene use at reasonable temperatures.
 

nosmoking

Just so Dab HAppy!
For dabs, it was always clear to me that with such high temperatures and most often no temperature control, bad things were happening at the interface between material and nail. Despite all wishful thinking some people have about the dab "levitating" above the nail surface or whatever sublimation miracle might happen, the temperatures are often much too high to not be a concern.
I have to wholeheartedly disagree with you my friend. This is an absurd statement to make and shows you didn't retain all the information in the read correctly. Not to pick on you...but many others will do the same unfortunately.

As @Accept mentioned the methods they used provided a lowest temperature of 322 celcius. That is 611 farenheit. And no byproducts were measured at this temp. The next range is 403 celcius which is 757 farenheit.

Many of us on here are dabbing at a temp range well under 700 farenheit so I think most of us have little to worry about. Its the torch dabbing cult that may need to worry if their not following a chart and timer.
 

KeroZen

Chronic vapaholic
It's one test method, for a very limited range of parameters, so until we have more data it's way too soon to draw any conclusion about the eventual health implications (and if you re-read my post you'll see I never talked about that. Acknowledging the presence of these byproducts and characterizing them is the first step, risk assessment will come later, even if the levels are most probably not overly worrying)

They also admit their study might be under-evaluating the concentrations. My post was absolutely not alarmist, I was trying to under-line the parallel with the recent e-liquid studies which also found a link between high temperatures and byproducts formation. I just wanted to emphasize that in both cases, temperature control seems to be the way to go. Educated dabbers probably already know that but the introduction to this study implies they are a minority.
 

shredder

Well-Known Member
This reinforces my happiness with my sic dnail. I rarely vape at over 550F, and I dab rosin not bho. As someone with asthma, low temps are key. Heck , my mighty vapes rosin OK at a max temp of 410F.

I'm not up on all the ins and outs with this study, but it might turn out that like combusting mj, the medical effects of mj cancel out negative effects of combustion. Idk. But I do know, that for me low temps are best.
 

Marihuana

Iso Tensei
I don't see why anyone would vape concentrates at high temperatures, no matter how parsimonious they are in conserving their product... If anything, going above 560°F on the coil makes the experience way too harsh. Low temp for life.
 

looney2nz

Research Geek, Mad Scientist


Fascinating. The benzene is alarming :(

I was talking with a local cannabis doctor who is pretty tapped into things, and he was telling me about ER issues with folks doing immense dabs (get ready for this 10-15g dabs???), I think it caused cardiac issues, and he inferred that some kids died but that would have been splashed all over local news like red meat.

While I understand the tech a bit, I've never used a dab rig, have been happy with my Herbie and DivineTribe (Matt, VapeDonkey!!!) modded Joyetech rigs. But it does beg the question, how big are the dabs folks are doing? (my dispensary pal says it's pretty insane, particularly at events like a Cup)

Are we entering territory where oil is so cheap that folks are burning 10-15g at a shot? That changes things... roll in the terps (study needs more on physiological effects of these, which from my experience does NOT require TONS of terps), this is all new territory, we haven't mapped this, we don't know SHIT yet.
We might get a rude surprise about LD50 with folks doing stuff like this! Good lord, how bored are people getting? :(

I hope they eliminate the pyrolitic studies and replace them with real vapor (would it be too much to ask to do it at 'sea level' and not Merck vacuum?)

have been mostly lurking on my regular threads, but the chemo has really been kicking my ass...
but this one really grabbed me.
 

nosmoking

Just so Dab HAppy!
would love to get @herbivore21 's take on it.
I have not seen him around much lately, however he posted this on the other forum in response to this same article:

herbivore21 said:
This is something I've wanted to see for a very long time! I'll be back here when I get the chance to have a good look at this study and all relevant limitations and strengths. You're right bro, the temps used seem to be very, very hot! I pity whoever is dabbing at 1022f!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Ouch!

A few key considerations so far:

* This study doesn't outline the method used for heating the nail during the experimental procedure. It is a hive ceramic 10mm domeless element nail, which is sold for 'torch use only'. This suggests torch use. I do not see any cause to dispute the method used to measure the temp of the nail however (thermographic camera).

* As above, the temps used here were almost all much higher than most or any of us would ever dab. Figure one, which identifies levels of methacrolein found at various dabbing temps refers to experimental conditions with median temperatures ranging from 322-526 centigrade (611f - 1022f).

In the 322c median temp condition, there was no observed release of this irritant compound. This is noteworthy, since I certainly would not be dabbing at any of the temps beyond that! The next median temp measured on the dish is 403c (757f). In this case, methacrolein was detected but the level was within the margins for error set by the authors for this study. At all successive increased temps, the levels of methacrolein found in subsequent NMR testing were beyond that which could be accounted for by the margin of error alone, and these dabbing temps as such can be suggested to be problematic. I do not recommend high temp dabs at all, but especially given these findings, we should avoid them!

There are a number of other limitations that I suspect here, but will need to read more thoroughly. Please note that my comments above may have missed some relevant details in the study, I've only given it one full read through :peace:

@looney2nz What that doctor told you sounds looney. Either you misheard, misinterpreted or he over exaggerated the amounts severely. Most of us around here are quite comfortable with a .01 gram dab and some of us still choke on that. A 1 gram dab is too large for any one set of lungs to take without a huge amount of waste in my opinion (thats 100 hits in one) let alone 10 or 15grams. You also dont have nails/dishes big enough for this. I believe the largest current nail or dish is the 30mm by CCA. You could probably dab a gram in it but not without crazy splatter or overflow of some sort. Not sure what that doc was dabbing, but maybe he should share!
 
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stickstones

Vapor concierge
I have not seen him around much lately, however he posted this on the other forum in response to this same article:



@looney2nz What that doctor told you sounds looney. Either you misheard, misinterpreted or he over exaggerated the amounts severely. Most of us around here are quite comfortable with a .01 gram dab and some of us still choke on that. A 1 gram dab is too large for any one set of lungs to take without a huge amount of waste in my opinion (thats 100 hits in one) let alone 10 or 15grams. You also dont have nails/dishes big enough for this. I believe the largest current nail or dish is the 30mm by CCA. You could probably dab a gram in it but not without crazy splatter or overflow of some sort. Not sure what that doc was dabbing, but maybe he should share!

Thanks for reposting! Please post anything else he says about this here as well!
 
stickstones,
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Eatrocks

Well-Known Member
I read this a few weeks ago, didn't they say it was the beta karatene terp?
 
Eatrocks,

explanga

Well-Known Member
You can find some videos on youtube even of people taking (going off memory) 10-20g dabs taken, of course they waste a lot yes, but go check it out.

One is kind of dumb "I am donating all the reclaim to a kid with cancer", it's like, why not make him some fresh stuff.

Go search for "biggest dab" there are several.

Yes, the temps we need are below that in most cases, especially with more advanced and accurate materials and heating methods.

Of course oral administration or sublingual is always an option, a great option, though the experience is different.
 
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explanga,

looney2nz

Research Geek, Mad Scientist
I have not seen him around much lately, however he posted this on the other forum in response to this same article:



@looney2nz What that doctor told you sounds looney. Either you misheard, misinterpreted or he over exaggerated the amounts severely. Most of us around here are quite comfortable with a .01 gram dab and some of us still choke on that. A 1 gram dab is too large for any one set of lungs to take without a huge amount of waste in my opinion (thats 100 hits in one) let alone 10 or 15grams. You also dont have nails/dishes big enough for this. I believe the largest current nail or dish is the 30mm by CCA. You could probably dab a gram in it but not without crazy splatter or overflow of some sort. Not sure what that doc was dabbing, but maybe he should share!

Yeah, I haven't been around much, radiation and chemo the last few months... cumulative effects, wonderful fun :(

I did not mis-hear, I was astonished at what he was saying, he may have been exaggerating, but to what end? I'm WELL aware of the folks doing small hits, and even micro-dosing. I was asking a question of everyone, not making a blanket statement. As for the study in question, I thought the study design and methodology was a bit loose :( But the benzene shit should scare anyone.

I've got concerns just as big with the levels of pesticides and fungicides in the supply of medical cannabis, as well folks willy-nilly using terps and PG, etc. for vapes. Trust me, you don't need or want any of that shit in your medicine when you're trying to drag yourself into remissions.
 

looney2nz

Research Geek, Mad Scientist
You can find some videos on youtube even of people taking (going off memory) 10-20g dabs taken, of course they waste a lot yes, but go check it out.

One is kind of dumb "I am donating all the reclaim to a kid with cancer", it's like, why not make him some fresh stuff.

Go search for "biggest dab" there are several.

Yes, the temps we need are below that in most cases, especially with more advanced and accurate materials and heating methods.

Of course oral administration or sublingual is always an option, a great option, though the experience is different.

I didn't even bother to check all the vids on youtube, what the hell are they using to do dabs that gigantic?

Donate the reclaim, puhlease...
 
looney2nz,

toros23

Well-Known Member
I didn't even bother to check all the vids on youtube, what the hell are they using to do dabs that gigantic?

This is the idiot I see doing it all the time... Just a 32G dab for this one, prob had to start hitting that thing around 900 degrees!

https://www.instagram.com/p/BYi7KjLDvVW/

Those thermals in the vid are huge but I think the pukinbeagle 50mm are bigger and sell for 2k+. This guy is usually dabbing out of 10K+ glass though.. lol
 
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toros23,
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