How Drugs Can Kill
By Dr.Fourkan Ali
Drugs of abuse may make the user feel pleasure, but they are
also toxic. We often hear that long-term drug abuse is bad for our health and
that even a single use of a drug can kill. But did you ever wonder HOW drugs
kill?
Most
people who overdose are under the influence of more than one drug. In 2003, the
Drug Abuse Warning Network reported an average of 2.7 drugs in fatal overdose
cases.
Importantly, in these cases, no
single drug is usually present at a lethal dose. Rather it is the synergistic
effects of combining the drugs that is lethal. And the majority of overdoses
involve legal drugs. For example, a combination of opiates (heroin or
prescription painkillers) and alcohol can be especially dangerous. Both
suppress breathing, but by different mechanisms.
In the United States, prescription
opiates are the cause for more deaths by overdose than any other single drug.
Most of these deaths ultimately result from respiratory failure. A toxic opiate
dose increases the inhibitory effect of GABA, which causes breathing to slow
and eventually stop.
Alcohol overdoses occur mainly in
two ways. First, by decreasing the excitatory effect of glutamate, alcohol
causes unconsciousness. At high levels, it can also slow or stop breathing.
Second, the body tries to rid itself of unabsorbed alcohol by emptying the
stomach. If a person vomits while they are unconscious, they may inhale the
vomit and compromise their breathing or even drown.
Smoking cigarettes can kill by causing lung
cancer, but it cannot lead to a nicotine overdose. However, it is possible to
overdose on nicotine by using combinations of nicotine patches or nicotine gum
and cigarettes at the same time. This combination puts much more nicotine into
the body than smoking alone. Sometimes, nicotine can reach levels high enough
to paralyze the muscles that control breathing or cause a heart attackStimulants such as
cocaine and methamphetamine trigger the release of the adrenaline-like hormone
norepinephrine, which causes increased activity, increased heart rate and blood
pressure, and narrowing of blood vessels.
Cocaine can kill in a variety of ways, most commonly heart
attack, overheating (hyperthermia), and brain damage. After taking even a low
dose of cocaine, you are 24 times more likely than normal to have a heart
attack.
Amphetamine,
methamphetamine, and MDMA (ecstasy) are also stimulants. They all increase
levels of the neurotransmitter dopamine and the hormone norepinephrine,
potentially causing heart attack, overheating, and/or brain damage. Because the
"club drug" ecstasy is often used in hot, overcrowded conditions
where people are dancing, overheating is the most common result of an ecstasy
overdose.
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