Inhalants
are common household and workplace substances
that are sniffed or huffed to give the user an
immediate head rush or high. Inhalants are "sniffed"
from an open container or "huffed" from
a rag soaked in the substance and held to the
face. A new trend, "dusting," involves inhaling common computer cleaners (One brand is Dust-Off) - several deaths have occured.
Inhalants include a diverse group of chemicals
that are found in consumer products such as aerosols,
plastic cement, nail polish remover, lighter fluid,
hair spray, insecticides, and cleaning solvents.
Their easy accessibility, low cost, and ease of
concealment make inhalants, for many, one of the
first substances abused. While not regulated under
the CSA, a few states place restrictions on the
sale of these products to minors. Studies have
shown that between 5 and 15 percent of young people
in the United States have tried inhalants, although
the vast majority of these youngsters do not become
chronic abusers.
USING INHALANTS,
EVEN JUST ONE TIME, CAN PUT YOU AT RISK FOR:
sudden death (presumably from cardiac arrest),
suffocation (typically seen with inhalant users
who use bags), asphyxia (solvent gases can significantly
limit available oxygen in the air, causing breathing
to stop), visual hallucinations and severe mood
swings, numbness and tingling of the hands and
feet, loss of muscle control, slurred speech,
headache, muscle weakness, abdominal pain, decrease
or loss of sense of smell, nausea and nosebleeds,
hepatitis, violent behavior, irregular heartbeat,
liver, lung, and kidney impairment, brain damage,
nervous system damage, dangerous chemical imbalances
in the body, and involuntary passing of urine
and feces.
Entry into the brain is so fast that the effects
of inhalation can resemble the intensity of effects
produced by intravenous injection or other psychoactive
drugs. The effects of inhalant intoxication resemble
those of alcohol inebriation, with stimulation
and loss of inhibition followed by depression
at high doses. Users report distortion in perceptions
of time and space. Many users experience headache,
nausea or vomiting, slurred speech, loss of motor
coordination, and wheezing. A characteristic "glue-sniffer's
rash" around the nose and mouth is also common.
An odor of paint or solvents on clothes, skin
and breath is also a sign of inhalant abuse. The
chronic use of inhalants has been associated with
a number of serious health problems. Glue and
paint thinner sniffing in particular produce kidney
abnormalities, while the solvents, toluene and
trichloralethylene, cause liver toxicity. Memory
impairment, attention deficits, and diminished
non-verbal intelligence have been associated with
the abuse of inhalants. Death resulting from heart
failure, asphyxiation, or aspiration have occurred
as well.
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