Little Red White Weed in a Car Breeze Cause Baby You Been Iving Lif

Ages & Stages

Drug Appendix

Bottle of pills. Bottle of pills.

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Types of Cannabinoids


Marijuana (Schedule I Controlled Substance)

Marijuana is the almost commonly used illicit drug in the United states of america. It contains at least 200 cannabinoids; all-time known are Delta-ix-Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and Cannabidiol (CBD). Near of the cannabinoids in marijuana have not been well-researched.

  • Slang terms include: pot, grass, weed, reefer, joint, herb, others.
  • Looks similar: a green, brown or grey tobacco-similar mixture of dried, shredded flowers and leaves of the Cannabis plant. Cannabis sativa and Cannabis indica are the two most unremarkably used and hybridized varieties.
  • How it is used: rolled in cigarette paper (joint) or stuffed into a hollowed-out cigar (blunt) and smoked; also the leaves and flowers can be vaporized. It tin as well be mixed into foods – edibles and drinkables —brownies, for instance— and used to brew tea. Produces a high typically lasting ii to three hours.

Delta-ix-Tetrahydrocannabinol (Schedule I Controlled Substance)

The master psychoactive ingredient in Cannabis. THC content has increased significantly in the past 20 years in a given sample of marijuana, from ~iv% to ~fifteen% or higher.

  • Slang terms include: THC.
  • Looks like: soft gelatin capsules, or can exist made into an elixir.
  • How information technology is used: ingested orally.

Hashish (Schedule I Controlled Substance)

The resinous material of the Cannabis institute, which is dried and and then formed into cakes, assurance and other shapes. It is usually more potent with a higher THC content than marijuana.

  • Slang terms include: hash, blackness Russian.
  • Looks like:brown or blackness cakes or resin balls.
  • How it is used: placed in a pipage or water pipage (bong) and smoked or vaporized.

Hash Oil (Schedule I Controlled Substance)

Neither hashish nor oil. What resembles oil is in fact one of several solvents that can be used to extract the psychotropic chemicals from the Cannabis institute. THC content: typically fifteen percentage or higher.

  • Looks similar: a syrupy liquid, varying in color from bister to dark brown.
  • How it is used: added to a cigarette and smoked. A drop or ii of hash oil produces the same psychoactive issue equally a unmarried marijuana articulation.

Dronabinol (Schedule iii Controlled Substance)

Constructed THC, used to stimulate ambition and control nausea and vomiting in people with cancer and other serious illnesses.

  • Brand name: Marinol.
  • Looks like: tablets.
  • How it is used: ingested orally.

Nabilone (Schedule 2 Controlled Substance)

Synthetic cannabinoid similar to THC and with similar indications.

  • Brand proper noun: Cesamet
  • Looks like: capsules
  • How information technology is used: ingested orally.

Sativex

In clinical trials in the USA; clinically used in the Great britain and some European Countries, and Canada. Synthetic THC is used for treatment of pain in multiple sclerosis and cancer.

  • Looks similar: oral spray
  • How it is used: sprayed in the oral fissure

Types of Inhalants

Amyl Nitrite/Butyl Nitrite (Unregulated)

Amyl nitrite is a flammable liquid once used to care for the heart condition angina pectoris; butyl nitrite is a vasodilator similar to amyl nitrite, simply less stiff.

  • Brand names: ram, thrust, liquid gold, others.
  • Slang terms for amyl nitrite include: poppers, snappers, pearls, amies, ames, boppers.
  • Slang terms for butyl nitrite include: blitz, snappers, rush snappers, bolt, others.
  • Looks like: articulate, yellow liquids sold in tiny glass ampules or bottles. Both have a pungent, etherlike scent.
  • How it is used: Users place the container up to their olfactory organ and inhale the vapors. The ampules are snapped in half with the fingers, producing the pop! or snap! sound that gave these drugs their street names.

Gases (Nitrous Oxide and Those Used In Hair Spray, Spray Paint and Other Pressurized Aerosol Sprays) (Unregulated)

Nitrous oxide, found in whipped-cream cans and machine fuel, is used medically equally a general coldhearted.

  • Slang terms for nitrous oxide include: laughing gas, whippets, shoot the breeze, buzz, grocery-store high, nitro.
  • Looks like: nitrous oxide is sold in pocket-sized metal cylinders with balloons.
  • How it is used: huffed directly from the can, canteen or container; from balloons; or from newspaper bags or a piece of clothing or fabric.

Liquid Solvents (Unregulated)

Glues, paints, nail-polish remover and other liquid solvents found in many household and industrial products.

  • Slang terms for liquid solvents include: air blast, Oz, spray.
  • How it is used: huffed directly from the can, canteen or container; or from paper numberless or a piece of clothing or cloth.

Types of Hallucinogens

Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (LSD) (Schedule I Controlled Substance)

One of the most potent mood-altering chemicals, manufactured from an acid found in the mucus ergot.

  • Slang terms include:acid, barrels, window pane, blotter acid, cube, microdot, white dust, regal brume, sugar cubes, others.
  • Looks similar: colored tablets, capsules; thin squares of gelatin; blotter paper impregnated with the colorless, odorless chemical and divided into small decorated squares. LSD is occasionally sold in liquid form.
  • How it is used: ingested orally; licked off the absorbent paper; the liquid and gelatin tin be put in the eyes.

Mescaline/Peyote (Schedule I Controlled Substances)

Mescaline is the principal agile ingredient in peyote, a small-scale, spineless cactus establish ethnic to the southwestern United States and northern Mexico. Mescaline tin also be manufactured synthetically.

  • Slang terms include: mescal, cactus buttons, cactus caput, mesc, bluish caps, moon, others.

Psilocybin/Psilocin (Schedule I Controlled Substances)

A pair of chemicals derived from wild mushrooms found in Mexico and Central America; can also be produced in the laboratory.

  • Slang terms include: psychedelic mushrooms, 'shrooms, purple passion, mushies, sacred mushrooms.

Diethyltryptamine (DET); NN-Dimethyltryptamine (DMT); Alpha-Ethyltryptamine (AET) (All Schedule I Controlled Substances)

A family of hallucinogens, all closely related to one another in chemic structure and effects.

Ketamine (Schedule I Controlled Substance)

An anesthetic closely related to PCP; used past veterinarians primarily to immobilize cats and monkeys.

  • Brand names: Ketaset, Vetalar.
  • Slang terms include: K, special Thou, ket, kit kat, cat Valium, super acid, super C, bump.
  • Looks like: white crystalline pulverisation, liquid, capsules.
  • How it is used: The liquid is injected, practical to marijuana or some other smokable substance, or mixed into drinks. The powder, besides, tin exist consumed as part of a drink, smoked or snorted.

Phencyclidine (PCP) (Schedule II Controlled Substance)

PCP was once used by veterinarians as an anesthetic for animals. Then many young people abused the drug, though, that in 1978 the Drug Enforcement Administration reclassified Sernalyn, every bit it was known, as a schedule Ii drug. Its manufacturer discontinued phencyclidine presently thereafter. Utilize among high-schoolhouse seniors plummeted from about 12.8 percentage in 1979 to 2.four percent by 1992. PCP, considered ane of the almost dangerous drugs of abuse, can make users hostile and tearing toward others or suicidal.

  • Slang terms include:  angel dust, hog, animal trank, elephant, belladonna, DOA, magic grit, others.
  • PCP combined with marijuana: killer joints, supergrass.
  • PCP combined with fissure: space blasting, star dust, white pulverization.
  • Looks like:  crystalline powder ranging in color from white to tan to brown; besides turns up on the market in the forms of tablets, capsules, liquids.
  • How it is used:  ingested orally, injected, simply about often practical to a leafy substance such as mint, parsley, oregano or marijuana, and smoked.

Selected Types of Narcotics

Heroin (Schedule I Controlled Substance)

Diacetylmorphine, a highly addictive narcotic derived from opium.

  • Slang terms include: smack, H, Big H, scag, scat, junk, blackness tar, China white, chiva, dope, others.
  • Looks like: white to dark-brownish bitter pulverisation, or tarlike or coal-like substance.
  • How information technology is used: injected but below the pare ("skin popping"), into a vein ("mainlining") or into a nasal passage ("shabanging"); smoked; snorted; heated on aluminum foil and inhaled ("chasing the dragon"); or dissolved in lemon juice and administered through a olfactory organ dropper.

Morphine (Schedule II Controlled Substance)

The major active substance in opium, and the source of its analgesic properties.

  • Brand names: Duramorph, M S Contin, MSIR, Oramorph, Roxanol.
  • Slang terms include: M, Miss Emma, Mister Blue, morph, dreamer, monkey.
  • Looks like: white crystals, tablets, injectable solution.
  • How it is used: ingested orally, injected or smoked.

Methadone (Schedule Two Controlled Substance)

Constructed morphine. Originally introduced as a painkiller, it is now used primarily in heroin-detoxification programs, to wean patients off heroin. Methadone is habit-forming, too.

  • Brand names: Dolophine, Methadose.
  • Slang terms include: junk, jungle juice, dolls, dollies, fizzies.
  • Looks similar: tablets, oral solution.
  • How information technology is used: ingested orally.

Hydromorphone (Schedule Two Controlled Substance)

A highly potent painkiller that is 2 to eight times stronger than morphine.

  • Brand name: Dilaudid.
  • Slang terms include: Lords, Petty D.
  • Looks like: tablets, injectable solution, oral solution, white powder, coughing syrup, rectal suppositories.
  • How it is used: ingested orally, inserted rectally; the tablets are likewise dissolved and injected as a substitute for heroin.

Fentanyl (Schedule II Controlled Substance)

Originally introduced in the 1960s as an intravenous anesthetic called Sublimaze. Now used in pain control too. More one dozen analogs of fentanyl take been produced illegally.

  • Slang terms include: apache, friend, great deport, he-human, jackpot, rex ivory, TNT, toxicant.

Meperidine (Schedule Two Controlled Substance)

A synthetic opioid that produces effects similar to morphine.

  • Make name: Demerol.
  • Slang terms include: Demmies.

Codeine (Schedule II, III, and IV Controlled Substance)

The nearly widely used naturally occurring opioid in medicine. Found in many pain relievers and cough medicines, either lonely or in combination with aspirin or acetaminophen.

  • Slang terms include: schoolboy.

Dihydrocodeine (Schedule Three Controlled Substance)

Combines a narcotic analgesic with aspirin and caffeine.

Pentazocine (Schedule IV Controlled Substance)

A pain reliever consisting of an opioid analgesic (Talwin); also combined with acetaminophen (Talacen) or naloxone (Talwin NX).

Propoxyphene (Schedule IV Controlled Substance)

An opioid manufactured lonely or in combination with acetaminophen or aspirin.

Selected Types of Stimulants

Methylene Dioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) (Ecstasy) Methylene Dioxyamphetamine (MDA) Methyldimethoxyamphetamine (DOM) (All Schedule I Controlled Substances)

Chemicals similar to mescaline and amphetamine, with both hallucinogenic and stimulant-similar properties.

  • Slang terms for MDMA include: ecstasy, XTC, Adam, love drug, decadence, essence.
  • Slang terms for DOM include: STP.
  • Looks similar: white powder, tablets, capsules.
  • How it is used: ingested orally, inhaled, injected.

Cocaine/Cleft (Schedule II Controlled Substance)

A highly addictive stimulant derived from the leaves of the South American coca bush. In the 1980s, as prices for powdered cocaine were soaring, crack cocaine rose in popularity.

  • Slang terms for cocaine include:coke, accident, flake, snow, happy powder, gold dust, olfactory organ pulverisation, nose candy, toot, white lady, Large C, Peruvian flake, Bolivian marching powder.
  • Slang terms for fissure include: stone, base, baseball game, bazooka, slice, kibbles and $.25, gravel, 1-l-one, teeth.
  • Cocaine combined with amphetamine: snowfall seals.
  • Cleft combined with heroin: goofball, speedball, Belushi, whiz, bang, wings, witch.
  • Crack combined with marijuana: banano, bush, coca puff, hooter, woolah.
  • Cleft smoked with PCP: parachute.
  • Looks similar: cocaine: a snowy white pulverisation; crack cocaine: small white to tan nuggets or crystalline rocks that resemble soap.
  • How information technology is used: Cocaine is snorted, or diluted in water and injected. Crack is smoked in a pipe or in a cigarette.

Amphetamines (Schedule II Controlled Substances)

"Amphetamines" is the commonage name for iii fundamental-nervous-system stimulants: amphetamine, dextroamphetamine and methamphetamine. They are prescribed for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and the sleeping disorder narcolepsy.

  • Brand names: Adderall (amphetamine); Dexedrine, DextroStat (dextroamphetamine); Desoxyn (methamphetamine); Biphetamine (amphetamine and dextroamphetamine).
  • Slang terms for amphetamines include: uppers, amies, amp, bennies, dexies, dominoes, pep pills, others.
  • Slang terms for methamphetamine include: meth, chalk, crystal meth, speed, crank, crypto, crystal, glass, water ice.
  • Looks like: pills, capsules, tablets. "Water ice," a smokable form of methamphetamine, is a clear, crystalline substance that resembles tiny chunks of ice.
  • How it is used: Amphetamines are ingested orally, snorted or injected. Ice can be snorted or injected too, but it is typically smoked in a glass pipe.

Methylphenidate (Schedule II Controlled Substance)

An amphetamine-similar psychostimulant used to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. When abused, it produces the same effects every bit amphetamines.

  • Brand names:Ritalin, Concerta, Metadate, Methylin.
  • Slang terms when combined with heroin: pineapple.
  • Looks like: tablets.
  • How it is used: ingested orally. Nevertheless, some narcotics addicts dissolve the tablets in water and inject the mixture. This practice can be highly unsafe, considering the drug's fillers may block pocket-sized blood vessels, seriously dissentious the lungs and the retinas of the eyes.

Types of Depressants

Methaqualone (Schedule I Controlled Substance)

Introduced in 1965 as a condom substitute for barbiturates, Quaaludes quickly caught on with young people. "Luding out"—taking methaqualone with vino— became a popular exercise during the 1970s. As information technology turned out, overdoses from Quaaludes were more difficult to treat than barbiturate overdoses. Although the drug was discontinued in the Us, methaqualone manufactured in other countries tin can occasionally exist institute on the street.

  • Brand names: Quaalude, Sopor.
  • Slang terms include: ludes, disco biscuits, lemmon 714s, love drug, Mandrax, vitamin Q.
  • Looks like: tablets.
  • How it is used: ingested orally.

Gamma Hydroxybutyrate (GHB); Gamma Butyrolactone (GBL) (Schedule I Controlled Substances)

Two of the so-called "date-rape" drugs, along with flunitrazepam (Rohypnol). GHB and GBL accept as well been abused by bodybuilders as alternatives to anabolic steroids, although there is no evidence that they increase muscle mass or reduce body fat.

  • Slang terms include: cherry meth, easy lay, liquid ecstasy, grievous bodily harm.
  • Looks similar: grainy white-colored or sandy-colored powder; a clear liquid sold in small bottles or vials.
  • How it is used: ingested orally by the capful or teaspoonful or mixed into a drinkable.

Benzodiazepines (Schedule IV Controlled Substances)

Benzodiazepines are one of the near widely prescribed medications in the Us today, and also one of the almost often abused.

  • Brand names for short-acting benzodiazepines: estazolam (brand name: ProSom), flurazepam (Dalmane), quazepam (Doral), temazepam (Restoril) and triazolam (Halcion).
  • Make names for intermediate-interim benzodiazepines: alprazolam (Xanax), chlordiazepoxide (Librium), clorazepate (Tranxene), diazepam (Valium), flunitrazepam (Rohypnol), lorazepam (Ativan), and oxazepam (Serax). Clonazepam (Klonopin) is prescribed to treat seizures.
  • Slang terms for Rohypnol include: roofies, rophies, R-ii, row-shay, ruffies, rib, rope, ruffles, ro, Roachies, date-rape drug, forget-me drug, Rochas dos, La Rocha, Mexican valium.
  • Slang terms for Librium include: L, lib.
  • Slang terms for Valium include: V, blues, drunkard pills.
  • Looks similar: tablets, capsules.
  • How it is used: ingested orally.

Types of Anabolic Steroids

Anabolic Steroids (Schedule Three Controlled Substance)

  • Brand names: Android, Oreton Methyl, Testred, Virilon (methyltestosterone); Anadrol (oxymetholone); Anavar (oxandrolone), Delatestryl, Depo- Testosterone, Testoderm (testosterone); Dianabol (methandrostenolone); Durabolin, Deca-Durabolin (nandrolone); Equipoise (boldenone); Finajet (trenbolone); Halotestin (fluoxymesterone); Maxibolin (ethlestrenol); Winstrol (stanozolol).
  • Slang terms include: juice.
  • Looks like: tablets, capsules.
  • How it is used: ingested orally, injected, patch worn on skin.

Article Trunk

Concluding Updated
12/3/2019
Source
Committee on Substance Corruption (Copyright © 2015 American Academy of Pediatrics)

The information contained on this Spider web site should non be used as a substitute for the medical intendance and advice of your pediatrician. There may be variations in treatment that your pediatrician may recommend based on individual facts and circumstances.

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Source: https://www.healthychildren.org/English/ages-stages/teen/substance-abuse/Pages/Drug-Appendix.aspx

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