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10 Weird Drugs You Don't Know About & After Effects! - Health - Nairaland

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10 Weird Drugs You Don't Know About & After Effects! by NoContract(m): 9:28am On Jan 31, 2013
It seems like every day, some enterprising, illegal scientist is mixing up a new formulation of brain-altering chemicals. Whether it be bath salts, crystal meth or licking the back of a cane toad, people will go to any lengths to get high. This article will put you on the forefront of bizarre drugs, so you can act like you've already heard of them when somebody offers you some.

Mephedrone



Known on the street as meow meow, this designer drug comes in the form of powder or tablets, and is allegedly manufactured in China. The stimulant properties of this chemical are similar to those of khat, an eastern African plant used for energy. It was first synthesized in the late 1920's but underwent a resurgence starting in 2003 when a fun-loving chemist posted a recipe for it on the Internet. Since then, it’s become a huge deal in England, where tabloid newspapers revel in publishing fake stories about dudes ripping their own nutsacks off while under the influence

Carbogen



A drug doesn't have to be complicated to be weird. Something like carbogen, which contains just two ingredients, deserves a place on this list. Also known as Meduna’s mixture after inventor Ladislas Meduna, this is just oxygen and carbon dioxide mixed in a way to give the brain the sensation of suffocation. It was once used in psychology as a way of determining whether a person could handle stronger psychotropic drugs, but some people use it recreationally. Carbogen huffers report seeing waves of color coupled with a sense of inner peace. Sounds pretty cool.

Krokodil



Doing drugs can have some serious repercussions on the body, but this is ridiculous. The synthetic morphine known as “krokodil” in Russia -- chemical name desomorphine -- was first invented in 1932 and was used in legitimate medicine for a while before being outlawed. Recently, it’s enjoyed a resurgence in Russia because it’s fairly easy to synthesize from codeine, iodine and red phosphorous, sort of like making meth. And like meth, it can really screw you up. It earned the name “krokodil” because of the effect it has on the skin of heavy users, drying it out and making users look like terrifying lizard creatures. Addicts have an average lifespan of just two to three years.

Freon



It’s always funny to think about the first person to take something used for normal purposes and turn it into a way to get high. Take Freon: this commonly used refrigerant is in tons of machines, but you can also use it to get seriously ripped. By venting a Freon tank into a plastic bag, users can “huff” the gas like they would any other inhalants, but people who have tried it claim that it’s several orders of magnitude more powerful. If nitrous oxide is beer, Freon is pure grain alcohol. Oh, and it can also kill you deader than a door-nail by freezing your lungs solid, and you get brain damage from it no matter what.

Ayahuasca



This herbal concoction prepared from a South American vine is actually getting somewhat popular in recent years, with celebrities like Courtney Love praising its properties. OK, so maybe that’s not the best endorsement. The vine is brewed into a tea with leaves from shrubs containing the psychedelic compound DMT. Users say that it gives you incredible hallucinations that can make you question your entire sense of identity, claiming that it’s a life-changing trip like no other. It also makes you vomit like crazy and gives you explosive diarrhea, but we all have to make sacrifices.

Scopolamine



Many of the drugs on this list were originally invented for medical usage, and scopolamine is still on the market, employed for things like treating seasickness and other motion sicknesses. Astronauts even use it. This is, of course, in small doses. When you up the amount that goes into your body, then you’re in trouble. Scopolamine in larger doses has a powerful and often very disturbing hallucinogenic effect. In Colombia, where it’s used heavily, it’s called “devil’s breath,” and is often used to dose unsuspecting victims, as it makes users incredibly passive and pliable. Once dosed, the scopolamine zombies will happily empty their bank accounts, perform sexual favors, or whatever else they’re asked to do.

Benzo Fury



With the lab name 6-APB, Benzo Fury is a synthetic stimulant similar in composition to MDA that is still legal to manufacture and purchase in some countries. It’s sold over the Internet as a “research drug,” which means that the manufacturers don’t tell you how to use it. Effects include a feeling of happiness and love towards others, as well as visual effects when eyes are closed, and mental imagery. So basically ecstasy, but legal. Unfortunately, it’s also been connected to the deaths of multiple people. The danger with these drugs is that they’re created by private labs and not tested, so their long-term effects are totally unknown.

Diisopropyltryptamine



One of the most interesting things about hallucinogenic drugs is how they affect the brain in different ways. A cool example is diisopropyltryptamine, which acts almost exclusively on your sense of hearing. Users report that when you first drop it, sounds start to seem flanged or shifted downwards, and the more you do, the lower the pitch seems to drop. That’s pretty much the only thing it does, although some people report loss of balance and equilibrium. If you like bass, load up on this stuff, get your car stereo bumping and you’ll be set for life.

I-Dosing



Let’s save the dumbest for last, shall we? Unlike all of the other drugs on this list, there’s no physical component to I-dosing: you get high just by listening to MP3 files. The science behind this isn’t actually all that crazy -- you can certainly stimulate different parts of your brain with audio signals -- but claiming that listening to lousy trance music can perfectly simulate the effect of shooting up heroin is totally absurd. The manufacturer claims that his tracks use “binaural beats” to affect mental performance, but no scientist will back him up. I-dosing did make for some pretty hilarious local news stories when parents freaked out and confiscated a bunch of MP3 players, though.

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