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Street Names:
Unknown.
Description:
Available as tablets, capsules, elixirs,
suppositories, and in solutions.
Origin and Medical Uses:
Constituent of opium used as a
painkiller. Available only with a prescription except in low doses in combination
with analgesics such as Tylenol or in cough syrups.
Short Term Effects:
Codeine is a narcotic drug. When a narcotic is
injected, the user feels a surge of pleasure, then a state of gratification into which
hunger, pain, and sexual urges do not intrude. The body feels warm and heavy and the
mouth feels dry. The user goes into a stupor. The dose required for this
effect may cause restlessness, nausea, and vomiting. Taken orally, the effects are
felt more gradually. Physical effects include nausea, vomiting, insensitivity to
pain, contraction of the pupils, increased urination, contstipation, sweating, itchy skin,
and slowed breathing. With very large doses the pupils contract to pinpoints, the
skin is cold, moist and bluish, and breathing may slow to a complete stop resulting in
death. Heroin use is particularly risky since purity and dosage can only be guessed
at. Use of narcotics in combination with alcohol can be very dangerous. (See synergism.)
Long Term Effects:
Severe constipation, contracted pupils,
moodiness, and menstrual irregularities. These effects disappear after the user
stops taking the drug. Chronic users may develop lung problems due to the effects of
narcotics on respiration. AIDS and other infections can be caused by unsterile
needles. Abscesses, cellulitis, liver damage, tetanus, and brain damage can also
result. Perhaps half of all narcotic dependent women have complications during
pregnancy and birth such as miscarriage, breech delivery, ceasarian section, anaemia,
cardiac disease, diabetes, pneumonia, hepatitis, and premature birth. Infants born
to narcotic addicted mothers are smaller than average and frequently share their mother's
injection related infections such as AIDS as well as her addiction. Narcotic
withdrawal can cause stillbirth. A newborn infant may suffer signs of withdrawal
because of his mother's habit.
Tolerance and Dependence:
Tolerance develops fairly rapidly, making higher doses
necessary to maintain the desired intensity of effects. Most narcotics are highly
addictive and regular use results in severe physical
dependence. Withdrawal
symptoms include severe anxiety, insomnia, profuse sweating, muscle spasms, chills,
shivering, tremors, and can occur four to five hours after the last dose. The
symptoms usually last 7 to 10 days. Dependence on less potent narcotic analgesics
such as Percodan or codeine can go undetected by the user for some time. Users may
respond to the pain of withdrawal by taking another dose without realizing they have
become addicted.
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