1 / 20

By Kirsten Garrett, Samantha Foxx, Dante Kelly, Benjamin McBride and Patrick Peou

INHALANTS. By Kirsten Garrett, Samantha Foxx, Dante Kelly, Benjamin McBride and Patrick Peou. What are the names of the drugs?. Common street names:. Laughing gas Locker room Medusa Moon gas Oz Pearls Poor mans pot Poppers Quicksilver Rush snappers Satan's secret Shoot the breeze

Télécharger la présentation

By Kirsten Garrett, Samantha Foxx, Dante Kelly, Benjamin McBride and Patrick Peou

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. INHALANTS By Kirsten Garrett, Samantha Foxx, Dante Kelly, Benjamin McBride and Patrick Peou

  2. What are the names of the drugs?

  3. Common street names: • Laughing gas • Locker room • Medusa • Moon gas • Oz • Pearls • Poor mans pot • Poppers • Quicksilver • Rush snappers • Satan's secret • Shoot the breeze • Snappers • Snot balls • Spray • Texas shoe shine • Thrust • Toilet water • Toncho • Whippets • Whiteout • Air Blast • Ames Amys • Aroma of man • Bolt boppers • Bullet • Bullet Bold • Buzz Bomb • Discorama • Hardware • Heart- on • Hiagra in a bottle • Highball • Hippie crack •  Huff

  4. What type of drug is it?

  5. Inhalants fall into the following categories: • Aerosols —sprays that contain propellants and solvents • Household aerosol propellants in items such as spray paints, hair ordeodorant sprays, fabric protector sprays, aerosol computer cleaning products, and vegetable oil sprays • Gases—found in household or commercial products and used as medical anesthetics • Household or commercial products, including butane lighters and propane tanks, whipped cream aerosols or dispensers (whippets), and refrigerant gases • Medical anesthetics, such as either, chloroform, halothane, and nitrous oxide • Volatile solvents — liquids that vaporize at room temperature • Industrial or household products, including paint thinners or removers, degreasers, dry-cleaning fluids, gasoline, lighter fluid • Art or office supply solvents, including correction fluids, felt-tip marker fluid, electronic contact cleaners, glue

  6. These products contain a wide range of chemicals, such as... • benzene (gasoline) • butane (cigarette lighter refills, air fresheners) • chlorinated hydrocarbons (dry cleaning chemicals, correctionfluids) • hexane (glues, gasoline) • methylene chloride (varnish removers, paint thinners) • nitrous oxide (whipped cream dispensers, gas cylinders) • toluene (spray paints, rubber cement, gasoline)

  7. How does the drug enter the body?

  8. When the vapors are inhaled (1), they are absorbed through the lungs (2) which they then enter the bloodstream (3). Once in the bloodstream, the various chemicals or chemical travel to the brain (4) and to the other tissues throughout the body. Most of the inhalants that are abused stress/depress the functioning of the nervous system. But the effects of each inhalants are difficult to determine because each product is made of many different chemicals and each person may breathe in different amounts of each chemical. Though these chemicals do have significant effects on the nervous system!

  9. What is this drug used for? (medicinal or illegal purposes) 

  10. INHALANTS ARE LEGAL:The products that are used as inhalants are legal, but people who use them to get high run the risk of really hurting or even killing themselves. For example; medicinal purposes: Dentists use nitrous oxide better known as "laughing gas" to help patiants with pain cause by the proceedure they are performing. Also if you have sinus problems the doctor will give you a nasal spray or vapor rub to help with breathing. And if you have asthma, the doctor will give you an inhaler or an aersol machine For example; getting high purposes: Kids young as 8 think that sniffing Sharpie markers or glue is "cool" because they say something like, "everyone is doing it" and it only takes one time to get hooked on huffing, paint, glue, cool whip, or any other kind of vapor chemical of some sort.

  11. What are the short/long term effects on the body and mind?

  12. Long-term effects: • Muscle weakness • Disorientation • Loss of coordination • Irritability • Depression • Memory loss, diminished intelligence • Hearing loss • Bone marrow damage • Serious and sometimes irreversible damage to the heart, liver, Kidneys, lungs and brain • Short-term effects: • Slurred speech • Dizziness • Loss of coordination • Impaired judgment • Hallucinations • Aggressiveness • Apathy • Unconsciousness • Severe headaches • Rashes around the nose and mouth • Irregular and rapid heart beat • Heart failure and death

  13. What are the possible effects in the social or emotional areas of PISES particularly toward friends and family?

  14. Possible effects socially or emotionally towards friends and family would be that they are concerned and overwhelmed that they would have to see a loved on suffer from their addiction. Some would give up on them or take them to a rehab center.

  15. Is there any physical or psychological dependence or addiction and how?

  16. Yes , there's an addiction. Many people that abuse the inhalants find that they are "forced" to continue. They affect your brain and you could obtain mild withdrawal syndrome. Addiction would later follow up if you don't terminate your act.

  17. http://www.drugfreeworld.org/#/videos/sniffing http://www.drugfreeworld.org/#/videos/one-hit http://www.funtrivia.com/playquiz/quiz324777252e440.html

More Related