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Bath salts emerging as new recreational drugs

The use of bath salts as recreational drugs has greatly escalated in recent years. Researchers from the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma describe an incident of a man experiencing significant agitation, paranoia, and hallucinations who also exhibited violent behavior upon his emergency department arrival.

His case is not unique. Despite disclaimers of “not for human consumption” package warnings, according to the American Association of Poison Control Centers, calls for bath salt poisoning incidents have skyrocketed, with 1,782 since January 2011 compared with 302 in all of 2010. The inexpensive powdery substances with benign names contain stimulants not detectable through drug screens. However, they can produce a “high” along with increased blood pressure, increased heart rate, agitation, hallucinations, extreme paranoia, and delusions, not unlike the Oklahoma patient.

Treatment for ingesting these bath salts is sedation until the side effects wear off, along with supportive care. Although currently federally unregulated, 26 states have made these substances illegal. This new research was presented at CHEST 2011, the 77th annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians (ACCP), in Honolulu, Hawaii.

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1 thought on “Bath salts emerging as new recreational drugs”

  1. Those arent bath salts, you idiots! Those are RESEARCH CHEMICALS… different type of drugs, aiming to have similar effects as their illegal counterparts. Synthetic cannabinoids, other type of stimulants and hallucinogenics… all these RCs are packed and labeled as “bath salts”, so they can pass more easily through the borders. If you drop these RCs in water in your bath, they’ll just dissolve there – like putting sugar in your bathtub. Pointless. These drugs are LEGAL, because the law hasn’t banned them yet – the law bans just a specific chemical.

    Reply

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