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 Boredom named as cause of teen drug use at Portage meeting
In Portage, the search is on for a way to stop teen drug abuse and ...
 Educators see meth's effects on children
Dee Buckstaff, who owns two Montessori schools in Jackson, saw the rapacious monster methamphetamine up ...
 Heroin overdose cases increasing
HOLYOKE - Doctors at Holyoke Medical Center are reporting a "sharp" rise in the number ...
 Studies Reveal More Problems Facing Alcoholics
Two more research studies have emphasized the serious health effects of long-term heavy drinking, from ...
 Facts about drunk driving
Alcohol is a factor in 35% of the United States crash costs. Alcohol-related crashes ...
 cocaine facts
Individuals of all ages use crack cocaine--data reported in the National Household Survey on Drug ...
 METH Users are prone to violent actions
April 27, 2003 - HILLSBORO Ð Lt. Chuck Middleton, of the Highland County Sheriff’s Office ...

Meth Facts

  • Methamphetamine is the name of the drug commonly known on the street as Meth, Crystal Meth, Crystal, Ice, Crank, Speed, Glass, & Chalk.
  • Methamphetamine comes in many forms and can be smoked, snorted, orally ingested, or injected.
  • Meth is odorless, making it difficult to detect.
  • In the 1980's, "ice," a smokable form of methamphetamine, came into use.
  • Acute lead poisoning is a potential risk for methamphetamine abusers.
  • Even small amounts of meth can produce serious negative effects on your body such as hyperthermia and convulsions, which sometimes result in death to the user.
  • Meth is a stimulant on the central nervous system and has a high potential for abuse and addiction.
  • Meth stimulation on the central nervous system, causing chemical reactions in the brain which trick the body into thinking it has unlimited energy supplies and drains energy reserves needed in other parts of the body.
  • Meth's effects the user in similar ways as cocaine, but with more power, more amps to the body so to speak.
  • Meth looks like white crystalline powder, soluble in water or alcohol and bitter-tasting.
  • Research shows that damage to neurons containing Dopamine and Serotonin occurs to the nerve endings "terminals" which appear to have limited ability to re-grow, thus putting the user at risk for conditions such as Parkinsons & Alzheimers in later years.
  • Meth users can stay awake for long periods of time and then eventually crash, feeling tired and depressed, worse off then than before they took the drug.
  • Chemical imbalances in the brain combined with sleep deprivation commonly associated with continued use of meth cause the user to experience hallucinations, extreme paranoia and bizarre, violent behavior.
  • Women are more likely to use meth than cocaine.
  • Methamphetamine kills by causing heart failure, brain damage and stroke.