Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Most slang names for marijuana and hashish date to the jazz era, when it was called gauge, jive, reefer. Weed is a commonly used slang term for drug cannabis. New slang names, like trees, came into use early in the twenty-first century. [2] [3] [4]
The Drug Abuse Resistance Education program is costly, and is criticized for pushing out science-based health education. Other criticisms of the program include its ineffectiveness, and its training of children to be police informants. [See anti-cannabis organizations.] DEA or Drug Enforcement Administration
Drug, toxin, or chemical resistance is a consequence of evolution and is a response to pressures imposed on any living organism. Individual organisms vary in their sensitivity to the drug used and some with greater fitness may be capable of surviving drug treatment.
Dried preparations of the plant are also called ganja, one of the oldest and most commonly used synonyms for marijuana. [22] [23] [21] The dictionary definition of cannabis at Wiktionary. cần sa Vietnamese. [24] Chamba Chichewa. [25] Chanvre
A drug of last resort (DoLR), also known as a heroic dose, [1] is a pharmaceutical drug which is tried after all other drug options have failed to produce an adequate response in the patient. Drug resistance, such as antimicrobial resistance or antineoplastic resistance, may make the first-line drug ineffective, especially in case of multidrug ...
Reverse tolerance or drug sensitization is a pharmacological phenomenon describing subjects' increased reaction (positive or negative) to a drug following its repeated use. [4] Not all drugs are subject to reverse tolerance. This is the opposite of drug tolerance, in which the effect or the subject's reaction decreases following its repeated ...
Drug tolerance or drug insensitivity is a pharmacological concept describing subjects' reduced reaction to a drug following its repeated use. Increasing its dosage may re-amplify the drug's effects; however, this may accelerate tolerance, further reducing the drug's effects.
Cross-resistant and multiply resistant weeds resist multiple MoAs, [6] and are particularly difficult to control. There is limited evidence of resistance undoing other resistances. For example, prosulfocarb and trifluralin : their inverse mechanisms of resistance contradict, and so by evolving to one the weed loses resistance to the other, at ...