 INHALANTS
Inhalants differ from other drugs because they are just household
products with toxic chemicals huffed, inhaled and sniffed to feel
"high". Inhalants are often referred to as whippets or
laughing gas, but many common household products can be as inhalants.
Products such as glue, polish remover, paint, whipped cream in aerosol
cans, gasoline, air fresheners, and permanent markers are all used
as inhalants. Usually pre-teen and teenaged kids use inhalants when
they are first trying drugs or they resort to inhalants when they
have no money to buy drugs.
These products are huffed, snorted or sniffed to feel "high".
The high felt off inhalants is immediate however not very long lasting.
Initially a person will feel intoxicated or loss consciousness because
of all the foreign chemicals being unleashed into the body. Side
effects of inhalants include headache, abrupt changes in mood, loss
of feeling in limbs, loss of hearing, and nausea. Because using
inhalants is basically just suffocating the brain with poisonous
chemicals, the long-term effects of huffing can be very dangerous.
Habitual huffing, or even huffing chemicals that are extremely toxic
to the body can result in brain damage, heart failure, problems
with respiratory and auditory functioning, and possibly death. These
consequences are often times irreversible making inhalants a very
dangerous drug.
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