USING INHALANTS EVEN ONE TIME CAN PUT YOU
AT RISK FOR:
- sudden death
- suffocation
- visual hallucinations and severe mood swings
- numbness and tingling of the hands and feet
PROLONGED USE CAN RESULT IN:
- headache, muscle weakness, abdominal pain
- decrease or loss of sense of smell
- nausea and nosebleeds
- hepatitis
- violent behavior
- irregular heartbeat
- liver, lung, and kidney impairment
- brain damage
- nervous system damage
- dangerous chemical imbalances in the body
- involuntary passing of urine and feces
HOW CAN YOU POSSIBLY DIE FROM USING
INHALANTS?
According to medical experts,
death can occur in at least five ways:
- asphyxia — solvent gases ran significantly limit available oxygen
in the air, causing breathing to stop;
- suffocation — typically seen with inhalant users who use bags;
- choking on vomits;
- careless and dangerous behaviors in potentially dangerous
settings; and
- sudden sniffing death syndrome, presumably from cardiac arrest.
ARE INHALANTS ADDICTIVE?
When inhalant use continues over a period of time, a user will
probably develop a tolerance to inhalants. This means that the user will
need more frequent use and greater amounts of a substance to achieve the
effect desired. This, in turn, leaves a user at much greater risk of
suffering from possible negative effects of the drug, such as liver,
lung, and kidney impairment, brain damage, nervous system damage, and
even death.
Physical dependence can also result, and when a user tries to give up
the inhalant habit, withdrawal symptoms such as hallucinations,
headaches, chills, delirium tremors, and stomach cramps may occur.
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