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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1980
To the Editor.— Refering to the letter by Falck and Seal (244:332, 1980) regarding their discovery of street manufactured methaqualone (Quaalude) tablets actually containing phencyclidine hydrochloride (PCP). I recently experienced an example of such deception in street drug trade when a 21-year-old man came to our emergency room with an acute ...
R, Falck, M, Seal
+7 more sources
To the Editor.— Refering to the letter by Falck and Seal (244:332, 1980) regarding their discovery of street manufactured methaqualone (Quaalude) tablets actually containing phencyclidine hydrochloride (PCP). I recently experienced an example of such deception in street drug trade when a 21-year-old man came to our emergency room with an acute ...
R, Falck, M, Seal
+7 more sources
Annals of Emergency Medicine, 1985
Following the ingestion of an alleged aphrodisiac known as "yo-yo," a 16-year-old girl experienced an acute dissociative reaction accompanied by weakness, paresthesias, and incoordination. Subsequent symptoms included anxiety, headache, nausea, palpitations, and chest pain.
C H, Linden, W P, Vellman, B, Rumack
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Following the ingestion of an alleged aphrodisiac known as "yo-yo," a 16-year-old girl experienced an acute dissociative reaction accompanied by weakness, paresthesias, and incoordination. Subsequent symptoms included anxiety, headache, nausea, palpitations, and chest pain.
C H, Linden, W P, Vellman, B, Rumack
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Journal of Drug Education, 1972
A study of the content of street drugs available to a college campus and a community is presented. Emphasis is given to the adulterants and substitutions encountered in the illicit preparations. The incidence of adverse drug reactions is paralleled with the incidence of toxic drug mixtures.
Stuart H. James, Sudhir Bhatt
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A study of the content of street drugs available to a college campus and a community is presented. Emphasis is given to the adulterants and substitutions encountered in the illicit preparations. The incidence of adverse drug reactions is paralleled with the incidence of toxic drug mixtures.
Stuart H. James, Sudhir Bhatt
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2019
The use of street drugs like cannabis, opiates, cocaine, amphetamine, and methamphetamine are serious medical and economic problems in the Western countries.
Serge Weis +6 more
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The use of street drugs like cannabis, opiates, cocaine, amphetamine, and methamphetamine are serious medical and economic problems in the Western countries.
Serge Weis +6 more
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Pulmonary manifestations of inhaled street drugs
Heart & Lung, 1998S ince 1611, when the Jamestown colonists first harvested tobacco, America has witnessed almost 4 centuries of inhalation drug abuse. The first general misuse of tobacco and drugs (opiates) occurred during the 16th century, when these substances were used as a substitute for legal currency.1 Drug scares have come and gone in cycles.
R, Cruz +5 more
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Journal of Forensic Sciences, 1991
Abstract Street samples of heroin (n = 102) and amphetamine (n = 120) seized in different areas of Denmark during a one-year period were analyzed for purity and additive content. The mean concentrations of the heroin and the amphetamine samples were 34 and 35%, respectively, but the purity of both drugs varied greatly.
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Abstract Street samples of heroin (n = 102) and amphetamine (n = 120) seized in different areas of Denmark during a one-year period were analyzed for purity and additive content. The mean concentrations of the heroin and the amphetamine samples were 34 and 35%, respectively, but the purity of both drugs varied greatly.
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Street Drugs Possibly Tainted With Clenbuterol
Journal of Emergency Nursing, 2008A30-year-old man presented to a suburban emergency department with complaints of tachycardia, tachypnea, palpitations, and anxiety. He stated he may have “gotten some bad heroin.” That evening he admitted to abusing heroin and cocaine with his family. Immediately after exposure they all felt that something was wrong.
Jerome Q, Dimaano +3 more
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Microcrystalline Identification of Drugs of Abuse: Stimulant Street Drugs
Journal of Forensic Sciences, 1983Abstract The microcrystallographic properties of the diliturate (5-nitrobarbituric acid) derivatives of certain stimulant drugs found in illicit street preparations have been determined. These microcrystallographic data can be used as a means of drug identification.
E A, Julian, E M, Plein
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