buy supreme carts online
This vape cartridge has amazing strength, they can compare it to Brass knuckles, and PURE vape. Although its label 95% THC, it doesn’t feel like it is that much stronger than other cartridges tested at lower percentages of THC.
It will satisfy those who are after power and strength with the Supreme cartridge. It will get even the person with the highest tolerance stoned.
There has been an independent lab test done on Supreme cartridges from the Instagram user datdude41510. The lab results came back with dirty THC oil and a much lower THC percentage. There was no other lab test result available on Supreme cartridges. It’s important to note that the packaging for the Supreme cartridge has different colors than the one we tried. However, the packaging is the same design and not much different. Read more about supreme carts here
more about supreme carts
Vape products regulated by the Maryland Medical Cannabis Commission they can sell no longer if the product contains vitamin E acetate, a substance recently linked to lung damage.
A bulletin released by the commission Friday stated medical cannabis vape cartridges, including disposable vape pens, will require screening for vitamin E acetate before they can release the product to a licensed dispensary for sale to patients. The expanded compliance testing is effective immediately, and it applies to vape products that have passed previous compliance testing requirements.
The commission’s increased scrutiny applies to licensed medical cannabis processors and the independent testing laboratories for medical cannabis vape cartridges. Current licensees have reported to the commission that they do not manufacture any vape products using vitamin E acetate, but the regulators have placed all cannabis-vape products available on “administrative hold” until they have completed the testing.
The Mary & Main cannabis store in Prince George’s County, for instance, told the Sun they had to contact their patients Saturday morning to explain why the commission’s “administrative hold” could delay vape cartridge sales. Although Mary & Main told their patients later that “extensive testing” had already deemed some of their cartridges “safe for consumption,” the commission’s bulletin stated “any disruption to the availability of vape products will likely be limited to a few days.”
The commission did not respond to requests for comment Saturday afternoon.
The commission’s “preemptive safety measure” comes after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last week identified vitamin E acetate as “a chemical of concern” among people with e-cigarette, or vaping product, use associated with lung injury. Although vitamin E acetate rarely causes harm when ingested as a vitamin supplement or applied to the skin in cosmetic products, previous research suggests inhaling vitamin E acetate may interfere with normal lung functioning.
Federal research this month has found that vape cartridges containing tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the psychoactive component found in the cannabis plant or cannabinoid oil, also contain vitamin E acetate used to dilute the cartridge. They also found vitamin E acetate in fluid taken from the lungs of 29 patients across the country who have each reported vaping-related lung injuries.
Agency officials cautioned they cannot rule out all other toxic substances. Since October, the commission and the federal Food and Drug Administration have both urged the public not to use vaping products containing THC. The commission stated over 1,000 people nationwide have developed severe lung injuries after vaping, including at least 23 cases in Maryland.
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