Information about Drugs
These days, drugs can be found everywhere, and it may seem like everyone's
doing them. Many teens are tempted by the excitement or escape that drugs seem
to offer. But learning the facts about drugs can help you see them for what they
are - and can help you steer clear. Read on to learn more.
The Skinny on Substances
Thanks to medical and drug research, there are thousands of drugs that help
people. Antibiotics and vaccines have revolutionized the treatment of
infections. There are medicines to lower blood pressure, treat diabetes, and
reduce the body's rejection of new organs. Medicines can cure, slow, or prevent
disease, helping us to lead healthier and happier lives. But there are also lots
of illegal, harmful drugs that people take to help them feel good or have a good
time.
How do drugs work?
Drugs are chemicals or substances that change the way our
bodies work. When you put them into your body (often by swallowing, inhaling, or
injecting them), drugs find their way into your bloodstream and are transported
to parts of your body, such as your brain. In the brain, drugs may either
intensify or dull your senses, alter your sense of alertness, and sometimes
decrease physical pain. A drug may be helpful or harmful. The effects of drugs
can vary depending upon the kind of drug taken, how much is taken, how often it
is used, how quickly it gets to the brain, and what other drugs, food, or
substances are taken at the same time.
Many substances can harm your body and your brain. Drinking alcohol, smoking
tobacco, taking illegal drugs, and sniffing glue can all cause serious damage to
the human body. Some drugs severely impair a person's ability to make healthy
choices and decisions. Teens who drink, for example, are more likely to get
involved in dangerous situations, such as driving under the influence or having
unprotected sex.
And just as there are many kinds of drugs available, there are as many reasons
for trying drugs or starting to use drugs regularly. Some teens take drugs just
for the pleasure they believe they can bring. Many times, someone tried to
convince them that drugs would make them feel good or that they'd have a better
time if they took them.
Some teens believe drugs will help them think better, be more popular, stay more
active, or become a better athlete. Others are simply curious and figure one try
won't hurt. Others want to fit in. Many teens use drugs to gain attention from
their parents or because they are depressed or think drugs will help them escape
their problems. The truth is, drugs don't solve problems. Drugs simply hide
feelings and problems. When a drug wears off, the feelings and problems remain -
or become worse. Drugs can ruin every aspect of a person's life.
Amphetamines
Amphetamines are stimulants that accelerate functions in the brain and body.
They come in pills or tablets. Prescription diet pills also fall into this
category of drugs.
Street Names: speed, uppers, dexies, bennies
How They're Used: Amphetamines are swallowed, inhaled, or injected.
Effects & Dangers:
Cocaine and Crack
Cocaine is a white crystalline powder made from the dried leaves of the coca
plant. Crack, named for its crackle when heated, is made from cocaine. It looks
like white or tan pellets.
Street Names for Cocaine: coke, snow, blow, nose candy, white, big C
Street Names for Crack: freebase, rock
How It's Used: Cocaine is inhaled through the nose or injected. Crack is
smoked.
Effects & Dangers:
Depressants
Depressants, such as tranquilizers and barbiturates, calm nerves and relax
muscles. Many are legally available by prescription (such as Valium and Xanax)
and look like bright-colored capsules or tablets.
Street Names: downers, goof balls, barbs, ludes
How They're Used: Depressants are swallowed.
Effects & Dangers:
Ecstasy (MDMA)
This is a designer drug created by underground chemists. It comes in powder,
tablet, or capsule form. Ecstasy is a popular club drug among teens because it
is widely available at raves, dance clubs, and concerts.
Street Names: XTC, X, Adam, E, Roll
How It's Used: Ecstasy is swallowed or sometimes snorted.
Effects & Dangers:
GHB
GHB, which stands for gamma-hydroxybutyrate, is often made in home basement
labs, usually in the form of a liquid with no odor or color. It has gained
popularity at dance clubs and raves and is a popular alternative to Ecstasy for
some teens and young adults. The number of people brought to emergency rooms
because of GHB side effects is quickly rising in the United States. And
according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), since 1995 GHB has killed
more users than Ecstasy.
Street Names: Liquid Ecstasy, G, Georgia Home Boy
How It's Used: When in liquid or powder form (mixed in water), GHB is
drunk; in tablet form it is swallowed.
Effects & Dangers:
Heroin
Heroin comes from the dried milk of the opium poppy, which is also used to
create the class of painkillers called narcotics - medicines like codeine and
morphine. Heroin can range from a white to dark brown powder to a sticky,
tar-like substance.
Street Names: horse, smack, Big H, junk
How It's Used: Heroin is injected, smoked, or inhaled (if it is pure).
Effects & Dangers:
Inhalants
Inhalants are substances that are sniffed or "huffed" to give the user an
immediate rush or high. They include household products like glues, paint
thinners, dry cleaning fluids, gasoline, felt-tip marker fluid, correction
fluid, hair spray, aerosol deodorants, and spray paint.
How It's Used: Inhalants are breathed in directly from the original
container (sniffing or snorting), from a plastic bag (bagging), or by holding an
inhalant-soaked rag in the mouth (huffing).
Effects & Dangers:
Ketamine
Ketamine hydrochloride is a quick-acting anesthetic that is legally used in
both humans (as a sedative for minor surgery) and animals (as a tranquilizer).
At high doses, it causes intoxication and hallucinations similar to LSD.
Street Names: K, Special K, Vitamin K, bump, Cat Valium
How It's Used: Ketamine usually comes in powder that users snort. Users
often do it along with other drugs such as Ecstasy (called kitty flipping) or
cocaine or sprinkle it on marijuana blunts.
Effects & Dangers:
LSD
LSD (which stands for Lysergic Acid Diethylamide) is a lab-brewed
hallucinogen and mood-changing chemical. LSD is odorless, colorless, and
tasteless.
Street Names: acid, blotter, doses, microdots
How It's Used: LSD is licked or sucked off small squares of blotting
paper. Capsules and liquid forms are swallowed. Paper squares containing acid
may be decorated with cute cartoon characters or colorful designs.
Effects & Dangers:
Marijuana
The most widely used illegal drug in the United States, marijuana resembles
green, brown, or gray dried parsley with stems or seeds. A stronger form of
marijuana called hashish (hash) looks like brown or black cakes or balls.
Marijuana is often called a gateway drug because frequent use often leads to the
use of stronger drugs.
Street Names: pot, weed, blunts, chronic, grass, reefer, herb, ganja
How It's Used: Marijuana is typically smoked in cigarette (joints),
hollowed-out cigars (blunts), pipes (bowls), or water pipes (bongs). Some people
mix it into foods or brew it as a tea.
Effects & Dangers:
Methamphetamine
Methampetamine is a powerful stimulant.
Street Names: crank, meth, speed, crystal, chalk, fire, glass, crypto
How It's Used: It can be swallowed, snorted, injected, or smoked.
Effects & Dangers:
Nicotine
Nicotine is a highly addictive stimulant found in tobacco. This drug is
quickly absorbed into the bloodstream when smoked.
How It's Used: Nicotine is typically smoked in cigarettes or cigars. Some
people put a pinch of tobacco (called chewing or smokeless tobacco) into their
mouths and absorb nicotine through the lining of their mouths.
Effects & Dangers:
Rohypnol
Rohypnol (pronounced: row-hip-nol) is a low-cost, increasingly popular drug.
Because it often comes in presealed bubble packs, many teens think that the drug
is safe.
Street Names: roofies, roach, forget-me pill, date rape drug
How It's Used: This drug is swallowed, sometimes with alcohol or other
drugs.
Effects & Dangers: