Alcohol & Drug Information
Tuinal
(amobarbital-secobarbital)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Street Names:
Christmas trees, rainbows.

Description:
Blue and orange capsules marked "Lilly F65" (100 mg.) or "Lilly F66" (200 mg.)

Origin and Medical Uses:
Tuinal is a member of the barbiturate family of drugs.  Barbiturates, also called "downers," were developed to treat sleeplessness, anxiety, tension, high blood pressure, and convulsions.  Some are used as anaesthetics.

Short Term Effects:
The activity of the central nervous system is slowed down.  A small dose relieves tension.  Large does produce staggering, blurred vision, impaired thinking, slurred speech, impaired perception of time and space, slowed reflexes and breathing, and reduced sensitivity to pain.  Overdoses cause unconsciousness, coma and death.  About a quarter of deaths due to drugs (excluding alcohol) in Canada are caused by barbiturates and barbiturate-like drugs.  Accidental overdoses occur when children swallow pills or when adults with increased tolerance are unsure of how many to take.  Use with alcohol can be very dangerous.  (See synergism.)

Long Term Effects:
Anaemia, impairment of liver function, chronic intoxication (headache, impaired vision, slurred speech) and depression.  Babies of chronic users may have difficulty in breathing and feeding, disturbed sleep patterns, sweating, irritability and fever.

Tolerance and Dependence:
Regular use induces tolerance, making increased doses necessary to produce the desired effect.  Since less tolerance develops to harmful effects rather than to desirable effects, margin between effective dose and lethal dose gradually narrows.  Psychological dependence can occur with regular use, as can physical dependenceWithdrawal symptoms include restlessness, anxiety, insomnia, delerium, convulsions, and even death.

 

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Sources:

(1).  Straight Facts About Drugs & Drug Abuse, Revised Edition, Health and Welfare Canada, copyright Minister of Supply and Services Canada, 1990

(2).  Drugs and Alcohol Behaviour: An Introduction to Behavioral Pharmacology, Second Edition, by William A. McKim, Memorial University of Newfoundland, Prentice Hall, 1991


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