These Products are useful in removing the
metabolites created by use of this drug from your body for a
specific period of time. and could be used to help detoxify the
body in a shorter period of time that might happen should the
body be let to detoxify naturally. ATC does not condone
the use of these products for any purposes that can be illegal
in certain areas such as reducing the chance of failing a drug
test.
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Depressants
Historically, people of almost every culture have used chemical
agents to induce sleep, relieve stress, and allay anxiety. While
alcohol is one of the oldest and most universal agents used for
these purposes, hundreds of substances have been developed that
produce central nervous system depression. These drugs have been
referred to as downers, sedatives, hypnotics, minor
tranquilizers, anxiolytics, and anti-anxiety medications. Unlike
most other classes of drugs of abuse, depressants are rarely
produced in clandestine laboratories. Generally, legitimate
pharmaceutical products are diverted to the illicit market. A
notable exception to this is a relatively recent drug of abuse,
gamma hydroxybutyric acid (GHB).
Choral hydrate and paraldehyde are two of the oldest
pharmaceutical depressants still in use today. Other
depressants, including gluthethimide, methaqualone, and
meprobamate have been important players in the milieu of
depressant use and abuse. However, two major groups of
depressants have dominated the licit and illicit market for
nearly a century, first barbiturates and now benzodiazepines.
Barbiturates were very popular in the first half of the 20th
century. In moderate amounts, these drugs produce a state of
intoxication that is remarkably similar to alcohol intoxication.
Symptoms include slurred speech, loss of motor coordination, and
impaired judgment. Depending on the dose, frequency, and
duration of use, one can rapidly develop tolerance, physical
dependence, and psychological dependence to barbiturates. With
the development of tolerance, the margin of safety between the
effective dose and the lethal dose becomes very narrow. That is,
in order to obtain the same level of intoxication, the tolerant
abuser may raise his or her dose to a level that may result in
coma or death. Although many individuals have taken barbiturates
therapeutically without harm, concern about the addiction
potential of barbiturates and the ever-increasing number of
fatalities associated with them led to the development of
alternative medications. Today, less than 10 percent of all
depressant prescriptions in the United States are for
barbiturates.
Benzodiazepines were first marketed in the 1960s. Touted as much
safer depressants with far less addiction potential than
barbiturates, today these drugs account for about one out of
every five prescriptions for controlled substances. Although
benzodiazepines produce significantly less respiratory
depression than barbiturates, it is now recognized that
benzodiazepines share many of the undesirable side effects of
the barbiturates. A number of toxic central nervous system
effects are seen with chronic high-dose benzodiazepine therapy,
including headaches, irritability, confusion, memory impairment
and depression. The risk of developing over-sedation, dizziness,
and confusion increases substantially with higher doses of
benzodiazepines. Prolonged use can lead to physical dependence
even at doses recommended for medical treatment. Unlike
barbiturates, large doses of benzodiazepines are rarely fatal
unless combined with other drugs or alcohol. Although primary
abuse of benzodiazepines is well documented, abuse of these
drugs usually occurs as part of a pattern of multiple drug
abuse. For example, heroin or cocaine abusers will use
benzodiazepines and other depressants to augment their "high" or
alter the side effects associated with over-stimulation or
narcotic withdrawal.
In recent years, GHB has emerged as a significant drug of abuse
throughout the United States. Abusers of this drug fall into
three major groups: (1) users who take GHB for its MDMA-like
hallucinogenic effects or as an intoxicant or euphoriant; (2)
bodybuilders who abuse GHB for its alleged utility as an
anabolic agent or as a sleep aid; and (3) individuals who use
GHB as a weapon for sexual assault. These categories are not
mutually exclusive and an abuser may use the drug illicitly to
produce several effects. GHB is frequently taken with alcohol or
other drugs that heightens its effects and is often found at
bars, nightclubs, rave parties, and gyms. Teenagers and young
adults who frequent these establishments are the primary users.
Like flunitrazepam, benzodiazepine is often referred to as a
"date-rape" drug, and GHB involvement in rape cases is likely to
be unreported or unsubstantiated. GHB is quickly eliminated from
the body making detection in body fluids unlikely; and its fast
onset of depressant effects may render the victim with little
memory of the details of the attack.
There are marked similarities among the withdrawal symptoms seen
with most drugs classified as depressants. In the mildest form,
the withdrawal syndrome may produce insomnia and anxiety,
usually the same symptoms that initiated the drug use. With a
greater level of dependence, tremors and weakness are also
present, and in its most severe form, the withdrawal syndrome
can cause seizures and delirium. Unlike the withdrawal syndrome
seen with most other drugs of abuse, withdrawal from depressants
can be life threatening.
How To Pass A Drug Urine Test For Depressants.
Learn Detection Times and Cut Off Levels:
-
How long the drugs will be detectable depends on which resource
you consult. We have provided a list of conservative
Drug Detection Times provided by
the manufactures of the drug tests.
-
For the cutoff levels of commonly abused drugs and more about
drug testing take a look at
Drug Testing Cutoff Levels.
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