yes it can. i was on diversion and i did not smoke but my boyfriend did..
and my officer said i had a little bit of THC in my system. asked if i went to a party? and i told him yes ;-P he said about how long ago? i told him 3 weeks but the truth is my boyfriend smokes every day. =P SO YES TO ANSWER THE ?
Probably not; most of the THC is absorbed when you inhale, so the second hand smoke, the exhale, won't contain significant amounts to cause hyperactivity if inhaled by children.
Almost all of the THC from marijuana is absorbed through the lungs when inhaled. When exhaled, there is only trace amounts of it in the smoke. You would have to be directly inhaling second hand smoke for a long period of time for anything to show up. Even then, unlikely.
It is very unlikely casual exposure to cannabis smoke will cause THC to be transferred to the blood.
The only way you would get thc in your system is if you eat or smoke it. You might inhale second hand weed smoke if someone is in a car or in an enclosed small room.
Yes second hand smoke can be detected in their blood
Yes, the more you smoke, the more THC is absorbed into your body
after inhaling the smoke of the pot, the smoke will lose majority of the THC contained but will always still THC. If you're asking this because you have a household pet then they will indeed be inhaling a small portion of your second hand THC.
Generally speaking, if you don't use marijuana on a regular basis, not even first hand smoke induced THC would remain in the system 3 weeks later. Assuming you're not a regular user, and considering that it was second hand smoke, the THC would have completely dispersed itself within a couple hours.
No, you need to actually inhale the smoke from the source because they test for THC which spreads through your body as the smoke hits your lungs.
This is a confusing question as I can't imagine why or how THC would come in contact with leather. Leather doesn't breathe, so no THC could be absorbed by it. If you somehow manage to smoke out of something leather, the resin would stick to the leather, but that's it.
THC enters your system when you consume cannabis products by smoking, vaping, or ingesting them. Once ingested, THC is absorbed into the bloodstream and then distributed throughout the body, including to the brain where it produces its psychoactive effects.
If cannabis is used in treatments for lung cancer patients, the second hand smoke should have little to no effect what-so-ever. So fight the war on the right side, inhale a cancer treatment not a cancer cause.