Siebter
Less soul, more mind
I would think dry her vapists would suffer less due to the less quantity of oil?
I don't see the symptoms discussed here occurring when dry herb vaping.
I would think dry her vapists would suffer less due to the less quantity of oil?
I don't see the symptoms discussed here occurring when dry herb vaping.
phytocannabinoids are lipophilic / terpenenophenolic compounds that are long chain fatty acids ( PUFAS) . phytocannabinoids are monoterpene / meroterpenoids . they are glandular resinous secretions ( enzyme /hormones) created in the trichome on exposed plant surfaces. they serve a s fatty acid metabolite when we ingest themOkay, so maybe I'm very wrong here, maybe what I refer to are actually „lipids“, but I thought what we inhale are mainly resins. Wouldn't we dry herb vapers suffer the same problems if it actually was (fatty, lipidious) oil?
I completely agree. The symptoms don’t appear to be prominent with dry herb. But a question was raised earlier if vaping dry flower still releases some kind of oil into the lungs. Some have said yes. And others have said no. One member mentioned the pressing of olives releasing oil. So when that question was raised we kinda moved from the cart crisis to does flower release oil oppose to symptoms. Or well that’s how I understood the last few pages in the discussion.
phytocannabinoids are lipophilic / terpenenophenolic compounds that are long chain fatty acids ( PUFAS) .
No, it's not.
I'm not naive enough to think it has zero impact on my airways and lungs though, the different means we have to vape and how are material has been processed has to be studied further.
Well I'm actually very naive when it comes to vaping flower – I think terminology plays a huge role here (at least for me) and I have a hard time believing that what we vape is an oily (as in „lipid oil”) aerosol. I always thought that vapor contains resins, not fats. You say „resin/oil“ but those two categories are actually miles apart I think.
resins contain a lot of different (essential) oils
Okay, so maybe I'm very wrong here, maybe what I refer to are actually „lipids“, but I thought what we inhale are mainly resins. Wouldn't we dry herb vapers suffer the same problems if it actually was (fatty, lipidious) oil?
I don't see the symptoms discussed here occurring when dry herb vaping.
I would think dry her vapists would suffer less due to the less quantity of oil?
Not all oils are alike. Each is a different chemical(s). Not all oils are the same. Some oils can be perfectly fine to inhale, while others are terrible. Just because the substance is an oil does not determine whether it's safe or not.
Hence I prefer to use the term „lipids“, because a lipid (vitamin e acetate) has caused those incidents of lipid pneumonia. Lipids should definitely not be inhaled.
@C No Ego – Don't get your points, too many links to read. So are we inhaling lipids or not? :-)
@C No Ego – I try to make this discussion as simple as possible. So you say THC is a lipid, lipids are known to cause lipid pneumonia when being inhaled, so you say that inhaling THC is potentially fatal. Or do I miss something here? Esp. when vaporizing cannabis, the amount of thc in the inhaled mass is quite high, which would mean that we would see cases of lipid pneumonia being caused by vaporizing dry herb (and smoking too I guess).
I have no ( none @ all) simple answers to your complicated questions
already answered that ... read my posts, THC is lipophilic ... not only is it a lipid it is terpenophenolic and used in our anatomy as a secondary metabolite , how/ what it mimics I've posted for you hereThe question is very simple: is THC a lipid or does it contain lipids?
You use a TM, right? It has a glass stem....hence I think the substances are not oils in the sense of „lipids“ (which is a relatively fixed term I think).
We are not talking about long term effects here, some of the victims of the cart crisis have been only vaping for a short period of time. Lipid pneumonia seems to occur acutely and not really in a slow, gradual way.
Edit - one argument just pops into my mind: if vapor was a lipid fatty oily thing, why do we need isopropyl alcohol to remove residue from our devices? This residue in my experience also does not seem oily, but rather sticky and solid. Like resin.