Cannabis

TL;DR — Acute HR spike (+16–17 bpm) → same-night REM suppression → next-day recovery distortion. Edibles hit harder because oral THC converts to 11-OH-THC (2–5× more psychoactive). Tolerance hides signal from wearables but not risk.

Key Facts

Intoxicating compoundΔ9-THC
Key active metabolite11-OH-THC — explains edible potency
Primary receptorCB1 receptor
Strongest biometric signatureAcute HR rise + REM suppression
Acute HR effect+16–17 bpm typical; 20–60% above baseline in some studies
REM effect~34 min reduction same night
FDA-approved CUD treatmentNone
Main stack conflictCannabis peptide interactions — blunts Retatrutide appetite suppression

Pharmacokinetics

RouteOnsetTmaxKey trait
Inhaled~minutes~9 minRapid, titratable; acute HR spike visible within 2–3 min
Oral/edible30–120 min1–6 hFirst-pass → 11-OH-THC; delayed overconsumption risk
Sublingual15–45 minIntermediate kinetics

Fat solubility: THC accumulates in adipose tissue. Terminal half-life 3–4 days initially, 4–12+ days in chronic heavy users. Functional detection window is weeks in heavy users.

Mechanisms

  • Acute: CB1 activation → broad GABAergic/glutamatergic modulation → altered salience, appetite, HR, memory
  • Tolerance: Chronic use → 15–20% CB1 downregulation (PET evidence); cortical regions most affected
  • Recovery: CB1 normalization starts ~2 days abstinence; near-complete by ~4 weeks
  • Withdrawal: Combined CB1 downregulation + reduced endocannabinoid tone + CRF-driven amygdala reactivity → Cannabis withdrawal

Biometric Phases

Acute (0–3 h)

  • HR rises +16–17 bpm; sinus tachycardia (>100 bpm) in ~19% of acute users
  • HF-HRV shifts sympathetic; BP biphasic (rise then orthostatic drop)
  • Appetite stimulations via hypothalamic CB1 receptor

Overnight

Next-day

  • RHR elevated, HRV suppressed, recovery/readiness lower
  • Executive function impaired 6–8+ h, longer in heavy users
  • Occasional users: loud signal. Heavy users: muted acute spike but persistent sleep/cognitive effects.

Risks

  • Psychosis: OR 1.4 (any use), 2.3–3.0 (daily), up to 5.7 (high-potency) — Psychosis risk
  • Cardiovascular: ACS RR 1.29, stroke RR 1.20, CV death RR 2.10; strongest with smoked use — Cardiovascular risk
  • CHS: Paradoxical vomiting from TRPV1 desensitization; hot showers/capsaicin help — CHS

Detection

Cannabis detection model — Best wearable candidate after alcohol. Expected AUC ~0.75–0.85 in occasional users; worse in heavy users unless tolerance-adjusted. Primary features: HR delta from baseline, REM suppression, motion context, sleep efficiency drop.

Interactions

Cannabis peptide interactions — The only meaningful Ben-stack conflict: cannabis blunts Retatrutide appetite suppression via opposing hypothalamic signaling. No dangerous PK interactions with BPC-157, TB-500, or GHK-Cu.

Cannabis MOC