Other Drug Addictions
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Hallucinogens,
PCP, Inhalants, Steroids
Dextromethorphan (DXM)
What is DXM?
DXM is in a class of drugs known as dissociative anesthetics. Many of these have powerful psychedelic effects at sufficiently high doses. Coincidentally, DXM also suppresses the cough reflex. This is why a powerful psychedelic is sold legally OTC in pharmacies and grocery stores throughout the US, and many foreign countries. DXM is one of the main ingredient in most cough syrups sold today. High doses of DXM have been reported as the cause in several deaths across the U.S.
Unlike opiates, relatively few find DXM appealing recreationally. According to William White’s data, 1/3 of all who ever try DXM recreationally hate the effects, 1/3 are indifferent and feel there are better drugs to have fun with, and only 1/3 actually enjoy DXM enough to use it repeatedly. There are at least several reasons for this. One is that about 7% of all Caucasians (the rate varies with other ethnic groups) have a genetic mutation known as CYP2D6 deficiency. This is a liver enzyme that is critical in metabolizing DXM. It turns out if you are one of the unlucky 1 in 14 or so that have this mutation, DXM at recreational doses will likely be an unpleasant, psychotic nightmare. Other reasons are that the effects of DXM are not what many want in a drug, nasty side effects, unpleasantness of drinking cough syrup, and other downsides. These factors, and the availability of better drugs on the street, have kept DXMs recreational use relatively low.
How does DXM affect the brain and body?
The effects of DXM are not really like any other psychedelic drug. The closest comparisons would be to other dissociative anesthetics, such as ketamine or PCP. DXM is closer to ketamine in effects, but can be quite different. The effects of DXM tend to be substantially different than other psychedelics, such as those in the serotonergic subclass (LSD, magic mushrooms, DMT, etc.). Drugs in both the dissociative anesthetic subclass and the serotonergic subclass cause hallucinations and altered states of consciousness, but in qualitatively different ways.
DXM is peculiar in that unlike most drugs, where higher doses just cause stronger effects, DXM is different. For most people, DXM exhibits "plateaus" where at increasingly higher doses the overall effect of the drugs changes dramatically. Within a given plateau, higher doses mean stronger effects. DXM users recognize four actual plateaus, based on dosage.
What are the possible consequences of DXM use and abuse?
The recreational use of DXM can be very dangerous. Using DXM with other medications can be extremely dangerous and possibly fatal. These drugs include: MAOIs (Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitor), the antidepressants Desyrel (trazodone) or Serzone (nefazodone), the antihistamine terfenadine (Seldane), SSRI antidepressants, Tricyclic antidepressants, lithium, or the diet drugs phentermine and fenfluramine. Taking DXM with MDMA ("Ecstasy") could result in hyperthermia and hospitalization. DXM has been shown to exaggerate the symptoms of many mental disorders and has been shown to be psychotomimetic, causing psychosis-like symptoms.
Help! I have a loved one that needs help with his or her addiction to DXM.
Many individuals have approached their loved one regarding his/her drug addiction, with no success. It may be helpful when talking with your loved one, to have a third party present that is professionally trained and knowledgeable about drug abuse.
Addiction Intervention Resources moves your family out of crisis and assists in addressing your loved one’s drug addiction.
CLICK HERE for more information on addiction-related crisis interventions.
LSD &
other hallucinogens
What are hallucinogens?
Hallucinogens are drugs that cause hallucinations
- profound distortions in a person's perceptions
of reality. Under the influence of hallucinogens,
people see images, hear sounds, and feel sensations
that seem real but do not exist.
LSD (“lysergic acid diethylamide”)
is the drug most commonly identified with the
term "hallucinogen" and the most widely
used in this class of drugs. It is considered
the typical hallucinogen, and the characteristics
of its action and effects described apply to the
other hallucinogens, including mescaline, psilocybin,
and ibogaine.
LSD, commonly referred to as "acid,"
is sold on the street in tablets, capsules, and,
occasionally, liquid form. It is odorless, colorless,
and has a slightly bitter taste and is usually
taken by mouth. Often LSD is added to absorbent
paper, such as blotter paper, and divided into
small decorated squares, with each square representing
one dose.
How do hallucinogens affect
the brain and body?
Hallucinogens cause their effects by disrupting
the interaction of nerve cells and the neurotransmitter
serotonin. Distributed throughout the brain and
spinal cord, the serotonin system is involved
in the control of behavioral, perceptual, and
regulatory systems, including mood, hunger, body
temperature, sexual behavior, muscle control,
and sensory perception.
What are the possible consequences of hallucinogen
use and abuse?
The effects of LSD are unpredictable. They depend
on the amount taken; the user's personality, mood,
and expectations; and the surroundings in which
the drug is used. Usually, the user feels the
first effects of the drug 30 to 90 minutes after
taking it. The physical effects include dilated
pupils, higher body temperature, increased heart
rate and blood pressure, sweating, loss of appetite,
sleeplessness, dry mouth, and tremors.
Sensations and feelings change much more dramatically
than the physical signs. The user may feel several
different emotions at once or swing rapidly from
one emotion to another. If taken in a large enough
dose, the drug produces delusions and visual hallucinations.
The user's sense of time and self changes. Sensations
may seem to "cross over," giving the
user the feeling of hearing colors and seeing
sounds. These changes can be frightening and can
cause panic.
Users refer to their experience with LSD as a
"trip" and to acute adverse reactions
as a "bad trip." These experiences are
long - typically they begin to clear after about
12 hours.
Some LSD users experience severe,
terrifying thoughts and feelings, fear of losing
control, fear of insanity and death, and despair
while using LSD. Some fatal accidents have occurred
during states of LSD intoxication.
Many LSD users experience flashbacks,
recurrence of certain aspects of a person's experience,
without the user having taken the drug again.
A flashback occurs suddenly, often without warning,
and may occur within a few days or more than a
year after LSD use. Flashbacks usually occur in
people who use hallucinogens chronically or have
an underlying personality problem; however, otherwise
healthy people who use LSD occasionally may also
have flashbacks. Bad trips and flashbacks are
only part of the risks of LSD use. LSD users may
manifest relatively long-lasting psychoses, such
as schizophrenia or severe depression. It is difficult
to determine the extent and mechanism of the LSD
involvement in these illnesses.
Help! I have a loved one
that needs help with his or her addiction to a
hallucinogen.
Many individuals have approached their loved one
regarding his/her drug addiction, with no success.
It may be helpful when talking with your loved
one, to have a third party present that is professionally
trained and knowledgeable about drug abuse and
addiction.
Addiction Intervention Resources
moves your family out of crisis and assists in
addressing your loved one’s drug addiction.
To read more information on our Drug Intervention Program, Click Here
PCP
What is PCP?
PCP (phencyclidine) was developed in the 1950s
as an intravenous anesthetic. Use of PCP in humans
was discontinued in 1965, because it was found
that patients often became agitated, delusional,
and irrational while recovering from its anesthetic
effects. PCP, known for its bizarre and volatile
effects, is illegally manufactured in laboratories
and is sold on the street.
PCP is a white crystalline powder that is readily
soluble in water or alcohol. It has a distinctive
bitter chemical taste. PCP can be mixed easily
with dyes and turns up on the illegal drug market
in a variety of tablets, capsules, and colored
powders. It is normally used in one of three ways:
snorted, smoked, or eaten. For smoking, PCP is
often applied to a leafy material such as mint,
parsley, oregano, or marijuana.
How does PCP affect the brain and body?
PCP is addicting; that is, its use often leads
to psychological dependence, craving, and compulsive
PCP-seeking behavior.
At low to moderate doses, physiological effects
of PCP include a slight increase in breathing
rate and a more pronounced rise in blood pressure
and pulse rate. Respiration becomes shallow, and
flushing and profuse sweating occur. Generalized
numbness of the extremities and muscular incoordination
also may occur. Psychological effects include
distinct changes in body awareness, similar to
those associated with alcohol intoxication. Use
of PCP among adolescents may interfere with hormones
related to normal growth and development as well
as with the learning process.
At high doses of PCP, there is a drop in blood
pressure, pulse rate, and respiration. This may
be accompanied by nausea, vomiting, blurred vision,
flicking up and down of the eyes, drooling, loss
of balance, and dizziness. High doses of PCP can
also cause seizures, coma, and death (though death
more often results from accidental injury or suicide
during PCP intoxication). Psychological effects
at high doses include illusions and hallucinations.
PCP can cause effects that mimic the full range
of symptoms of schizophrenia, such as delusions,
paranoia, disordered thinking, a sensation of
distance from one's environment, and catatonia.
Speech is often sparse and garbled.
What are the possible consequences
of PCP use and abuse?
PCP was first introduced as a street drug in the
1960s and quickly gained a reputation as a drug
that could cause bad reactions and was not worth
the risk. Many people, after using the drug once,
will not knowingly use it again. Yet others use
it consistently and regularly. Some persist in
using PCP because of its addicting properties.
Others cite feelings of strength, power, invulnerability
and a numbing effect on the mind as reasons for
their continued PCP use.
Many PCP users are brought to emergency
rooms because of PCP's unpleasant psychological
effects or because of overdoses. In a hospital
or detention setting, they often become violent
or suicidal, and are very dangerous to themselves
and to others. They should be kept in a calm setting
and should not be left alone.
People who use PCP for long periods
report memory loss, difficulties with speech and
thinking, depression, and weight loss. These symptoms
can persist up to a year after cessation of PCP
use. Mood disorders also have been reported. PCP
has sedative effects, and interactions with other
central nervous system depressants, such as alcohol
and benzodiazepines, can lead to coma or accidental
overdose.
Help! I have a loved one
that needs help with his or her addiction to PCP.
Many individuals have approached their loved one
regarding his/her drug addiction, with no success.
It may be helpful when talking with your loved
one, to have a third party present that is professionally
trained and knowledgeable about drug abuse and
addiction.
Addiction Intervention Resources
moves your family out of crisis and assists in
addressing your loved one’s drug addiction.
To read more information on our Drug Intervention Program, Click Here
Inhalants
What are inhalants?
Inhalants are breathable chemical vapors that
produce psychoactive (mind-altering) effects.
A variety of products commonplace in the home
and in the workplace contain substances that can
be inhaled. Many people do not think of these
products, such as spray paint, glues, and cleaning
fluids, as drugs because they were never meant
to be used to achieve an intoxicating effect.
Yet, young children and adolescents can easily
obtain them and are among those most likely to
abuse these extremely toxic substances. Parents
should monitor household products closely to prevent
accidental inhalation by very young children.
Inhalants fall into the following categories:
• Solvents: paint thinners or solvents,
degreasers, dry-cleaning fluids, gasoline, glue,
correction fluids, felt-tip-marker fluids, and
electronic contact cleaners
• Gases: butane lighters and propane tanks,
whipping cream aerosols or dispensers (“whippets”),
refrigerant gases, spray paints, hair or deodorant
sprays, fabric protector sprays, ether, chloroform,
halothane, and nitrous oxide ("laughing gas")
• Nitrites: cyclohexyl nitrite (available
to the general public), amyl nitrite (available
only by prescription), and butyl nitrite (illegal
substance).
How do inhalants affect the brain and
body?
Although they differ in makeup, nearly all abused
inhalants produce short-term effects similar to
anesthetics, which act to slow down the body's
functions. When inhaled via the nose or mouth
into the lungs in sufficient concentrations, inhalants
can cause intoxicating effects. Intoxication usually
lasts only a few minutes. However, sometimes users
extend this effect for several hours by breathing
in inhalants repeatedly. Initially, users may
feel slightly stimulated. Successive inhalations
make them feel less inhibited and less in control.
If use continues, users can lose consciousness.
What are the possible consequences
of inhalant use and abuse?
Sniffing highly concentrated amounts of the chemicals
in solvents or aerosol sprays can directly induce
heart failure and death within minutes of a session
of prolonged use. This syndrome, known as "sudden
sniffing death," can result from a single
session of inhalant use by an otherwise healthy
young person. Sudden sniffing death is particularly
associated with the abuse of butane, propane,
and chemicals in aerosols.
High concentrations of inhalants
also can cause death from suffocation by displacing
oxygen in the lungs and then in the central nervous
system so that breathing ceases. Deliberately
inhaling from an attached paper or plastic bag
or in a closed area greatly increases the chances
of suffocation. Even when using aerosols or volatile
products for their legitimate purposes (i.e.,
painting, cleaning), it is wise to do so in a
well-ventilated room or outdoors.
Chronic abuse of solvents can cause
severe, long-term damage to the brain, the liver
and the kidneys. Harmful irreversible effects
that may be caused by abuse of specific solvents
include: hearing loss, limb spasms, central nervous
system or brain damage, liver and kidney damage
and blood oxygen depletion. Additionally, abuse
of amyl and butyl nitrites has been associated
with Kaposi's sarcoma (KS), the most common cancer
reported among AIDS patients.
Help! I have a loved one
that needs help with his or her addiction to inhalants.
Many individuals have approached their loved one
regarding his/her drug addiction, with no success.
It may be helpful when talking with your loved
one, to have a third party present that is professionally
trained and knowledgeable about drug abuse and
addiction.
Addiction Intervention Resources
moves your family out of crisis and assists in
addressing your loved one’s drug addiction.
To read more information on our Drug Intervention Program, Click Here
Steroids
What are steroids?
Anabolic-androgenic steroids are man-made substances
related to male sex hormones. "Anabolic"
refers to muscle-building, and "androgenic"
refers to increased masculine characteristics.
"Steroids" refers to the class of drugs.
These drugs are available legally only by prescription,
to treat conditions that occur when the body produces
abnormally low amounts of testosterone, such as
delayed puberty and some types of impotence. They
are also used to treat body wasting in patients
with AIDS and other diseases that result in loss
of lean muscle mass. Abuse of anabolic steroids,
however, can lead to serious health problems,
some irreversible.
People most often abuse anabolic
steroids to enhance athletic performance and to
improve physical appearance. Anabolic steroids
are taken orally or injected, typically in cycles
of weeks or months (referred to as "cycling"),
rather than continuously. Cycling involves taking
multiple doses of steroids over a specific period
of time, stopping for a period, and starting again.
In addition, users often combine several different
types of steroids to maximize their effectiveness
while minimizing negative effects (referred to
as "stacking").
What are the possible consequences
of steroid use and abuse?
The major side effects from abusing anabolic steroids
can include liver tumors and cancer, jaundice
(yellowish pigmentation of skin, tissues, and
body fluids), fluid retention, high blood pressure,
increases in LDL (bad cholesterol), and decreases
in HDL (good cholesterol). Other side effects
include kidney tumors, severe acne, and trembling.
In addition, there are some gender-specific side
effects:
• For men--shrinking of the
testicles, reduced sperm count, infertility, baldness,
development of breasts, and an increased risk
for prostate cancer.
• For women--growth of facial hair, male-pattern
baldness, changes in or cessation of the menstrual
cycle, enlargement of the clitoris, and a deepened
voice.
• For adolescents--growth halted prematurely
through premature skeletal maturation and accelerated
puberty changes. This means that adolescents risk
remaining short the remainder of their lives if
they take anabolic steroids before the typical
adolescent growth spurt.
In addition, people who inject anabolic
steroids run the added risk of contracting or
transmitting HIV/AIDS or hepatitis, which causes
serious damage to the liver.
Scientific research also shows that
aggression and other psychiatric side effects
may result from abuse of anabolic steroids. Many
users report feeling good about themselves while
on anabolic steroids, but researchers report that
extreme mood swings also can occur, including
manic-like symptoms leading to violence. Depression
often is seen when the drugs are stopped and may
contribute to dependence on anabolic steroids.
Users may suffer from paranoid jealousy, extreme
irritability, delusions, and impaired judgment
stemming from feelings of invincibility.
Help! I have a loved one
that needs help with his or her addiction to steroids.
Many individuals have approached their loved one
regarding his/her drug addiction, with no success.
It may be helpful when talking with your loved
one, to have a third party present that is professionally
trained and knowledgeable about drug abuse and
addiction.
Addiction Intervention Resources
moves your family out of crisis and assists in
addressing your loved one’s drug addiction.
To read more information on our Drug Intervention Program, Click Here or call our National Call Center 800.561.8158