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Meth Addiction

Methamphetamine addiction, meth addiction, or crystal meth addiction, whatever you choose to call it, it has spread to all areas of the United States and continues to be on an upswing. Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN) indicate that methamphetamine addiction related emergency room episodes increased 346 percent from 1991 to 1995.

Methamphetamine, or crystal meth, is a powerfully addictive stimulant that dramatically affects the central nervous system. Meth addiction is on the rise if for no other reason that it is made easily in clandestine laboratories with relatively inexpensive over-the-counter ingredients. These factors combine to make methamphetamine a drug with high potential for widespread abuse.
Get The Facts

Below find links to the statistics for some of the major drug and/or alcohol problem areas along the Eastern Seaboard:

• New York
• New Jersey
• Connecticut
• District of Colombia
• Florida
• Massachusetts
• Virginia

The effects of Methamphetamine addiction
A methamphetamine-induced 'high' artificially boosts self-confidence resulting in many users being overcome by a so-called 'superman syndrome.' In this state, methamphetamine abusers ignore their physical limitations and try to do things which they are normally incapable of performing. Meth is highly addictive because people often continue using the drug to avoid an inevitable crash that comes when the drugs' positive effects begin to wear off. Even first time users experience many of meth's negative effects.

Negative effects of Methamphetamine Addiction include, but are not limited to:

• Hyperactivity and irritability
• Visual and auditory hallucinations (hearing "voices")
• Suicidal tendencies and aggression
• Suspiciousness, severe paranoia
• Shortness of breath and increased blood pressure
• Cardiac arrhythmia and risk of stroke
• Sweating, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea
• Long periods of sleep ("crashing" for 24-48 hours or more)
• Prolonged sluggishness, severe depression
• Weight loss, malnutrition, anorexia
• Itching (illusion that bugs are crawling on the skin)
• Welts on the skin
• Involuntary body movements
• Paranoid delusions
• Severe amphetamine induced depression and/or psychosis

Street names for methamphetamine include 'speed,' 'meth,' 'crystal,' and "crank." Methamphetamine is used in pill form or in powdered form for snorting or injecting. Crystallized methamphetamine known as "ice," "crystal," or "glass," is a smoke-able and more powerful form of the drug.

Meth Addiction
Methamphetamine addiction, meth addiction, or crystal meth addiction, whatever you choose to call it, it has spread to all areas of the United States and continues to be on an upswing. Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN) indicate that methamphetamine addiction related emergency room episodes increased 346 percent from 1991 to 1995.

Methamphetamine, or crystal meth, is a powerfully addictive stimulant that dramatically affects the central nervous system. Meth addiction is on the rise if for no other reason that it is made easily in clandestine laboratories with relatively inexpensive over-the-counter ingredients. These factors combine to make methamphetamine a drug with high potential for widespread abuse.

The effects of Methamphetamine addiction

A methamphetamine-induced 'high' artificially boosts self-confidence resulting in many users being overcome by a so-called 'superman syndrome.' In this state, methamphetamine abusers ignore their physical limitations and try to do things which they are normally incapable of performing. Meth is highly addictive because people often continue using the drug to avoid an inevitable crash that comes when the drugs' positive effects begin to wear off. Even first time users experience many of meth's negative effects.

Methamphetamine stimulates the central nervous system, causing chemical reactions in the brain and tricking the body into believing it has unlimited energy supplies and draining energy reserves needed in other parts of the body. This is why meth addicts tend to stay awake for long periods of time and then eventually crash, feeling tired, depressed and much worse than they did before they took the drug. Chemical imbalances in the brain and sleep deprivation commonly associated with continued crystal meth addiction eventually result in hallucinations, extreme paranoia and often bizarre, violent behavior.
Meth addiction causes extensive damage to the body, and can cause death or permanent physical damage
.
Physiological effects of methamphetamine addiction include:
• Abnormally high blood pressure and rapid and irregular heart rate and rhythm
• Seizures and damage to blood vessels in the brain (stroke)
• Accumulation of excess fluid in lungs, brain tissue and skull
• Continuous and excessive dilation of the pupils
• Impaired regulation of heat loss and hyperpyrexia (body temperatures higher than 104°
• Internal bleeding and damage to other organs caused by disruption of blood flow
• Breakdown of muscle tissue, leading to kidney failure

Similar to other drug abuse, smoking and inhaling meth damages the lungs and nasal passages, and intravenous use can lead to the spread of the AIDS virus.

Methamphetamine appeals to the abuser because it increases the body's metabolism and produces euphoria, alertness, and gives the abuser a sense of increased energy. But high doses or chronic use of meth, also known as 'speed,' 'crank,' and 'ice', increases nervousness, irritability, and paranoia
.
The three phases of Methamphetamine Addiction
Methamphetamine addiction has three stages… low intensity, binge, and high intensity. The binge and high-intensity methamphetamine addiction is perpetuated by the abuser smoking or injecting the drug to achieve a faster and stronger high. The patterns of meth addiction differ in the frequency in which the drug is abused and the stages within their cycles.

• Binge crystal meth addiction is made up of these stages: rush, high, binge, tweaking, crash, normal, and withdrawal.
• Rush (5-30 minutes) -The abuser's heartbeat races and metabolism, blood pressure, and pulse soar. The user experiences feelings of pleasure.
• High (4-16 hours) -The methamphetamine addict often feels aggressively smarter and becomes argumentative.
• Binge (3-15 days) -The methamphetamine addict maintains the high for as long as possible and becomes hyperactive, both mentally and physically.
• Tweaking -The most dangerous stage of the cycle. See section below.
• Crash (1-3 days) -The addict does not pose a threat to anyone. He becomes very lethargic and sleeps.
• Normal (2-14 days) -The abuser returns to a state that is slightly deteriorated from the normal state before the abuse.
• Withdrawal (30-90 days) -No immediate symptoms are evident but the abuser first becomes depressed and then lethargic. The craving for methamphetamine hits and he may become suicidal. Taking methamphetamine at any time during withdrawal can stop the unpleasant feelings so, consequently, a high percentage of addicts in treatment return to abuse.

High-intensity abusers,
often called "speed freaks," focus on preventing the crash. But each successive rush becomes less euphoric and it takes more methamphetamine to achieve it. The pattern does not usually include a state of normalcy or withdrawal. High-intensity meth addicts experience extreme weight loss, very pale facial skin, sweating, body odor, discolored teeth and scars or open sores on their bodies. The scars are the results of the abusers' hallucinations of bugs on his skin, often referred to as 'crank bugs', and attempts to scratch the bugs off.

Meth addiction and 'Tweaking'
By far the most dangerous stage of meth addiction for the abuser, medical personnel, and law enforcement officers is called 'tweaking'. A tweaker is a methamphetamine addict who probably has not slept in 3-15 days and is irritable and paranoid. Tweakers often behave or react violently and if a tweaker is using alcohol or another depressant, his negative feelings and associated dangers intensify. The tweaker craves more meth, but no dosage will help re-create the euphoric high, which causes frustration, and leads to unpredictability and potential for violence.

A tweaker can appear normal: eyes can be clear, speech concise, and movements brisk. But a closer look will reveal the person's eyes are moving ten times faster than normal, the voice has a slight quiver, and movements are quick and jerky. These physical signs are more difficult to identify if the tweaker is using a depressant.

Tweakers are often involved in domestic disputes and motor vehicle accidents. They may also be present at "raves" or parties and they may participate in spur-of-the-moment crimes, such as purse snatchings or assaults, to support their habit.

So why is meth addiction such a problem?
Meth addiction is such a problem in America because the drug can be produced virtually anywhere. Motel rooms, trailer parks, and suburban homes can all be turned into clandestine "meth" labs capable of producing substantial quantities of the drug. The technical know-how needed to produce methamphetamines can easily be found on the internet. These peculiarities make the production of methamphetamine unique and especially difficult to control. Recent analyses have indicated that methamphetamine from these labs can be as high as 97-99 percent pure.

About the only thing that stands in the way of widespread production and distribution of methamphetamine is the limited availability of the chemicals required to make it. Ephedrine and hydriotic acid, two components of methamphetamine, are tightly controlled in the United States. Yet the recent surge in methamphetamine use suggests that drug traffickers are finding ways around this impediment.

Although the precursor chemicals may be effectively regulated in the United States, in Mexico they are not. Highly organized Mexican drug trafficking syndicates have taken advantage of their country's lenient regulatory practices to dominate the United States' methamphetamine trade. Utilizing the same trafficking routes through which up to 70 percent of the cocaine arriving in the United States now passes, the Mexican trafficking organizations have been able to deliver the chemicals needed to produce methamphetamine to associates living in the United States. These associates then "cook-up" and distribute the final product. In addition to this practice of illicit chemical diversion, these criminal groups also smuggle methamphetamine produced in Mexico to the United States.

Amphetamines - amphetamine, dextroamphetamine and methamphetamine are collectively referred to as amphetamines. Their chemical properties and actions are so similar that even experienced users have difficulty knowing which drug they have taken.

Methamphetamine Addiction
Amphetamine was first marketed in the 1930s under the name Benzedrine in an over-the-counter inhaler to treat nasal congestion. By 1937, amphetamine was available by prescription in tablet form and was used in the treatment of the sleeping disorder narcolepsy and something called minimal brain dysfunction (MBD), which today is called attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). During World War II, amphetamine was widely used to keep the soldiers going. During this period, both dextroamphetamine (Dexedrine) and methamphetamine (Methedrine) became easily available.

As use of amphetamines spread, so did the tendency to become addicted. Amphetamines became a cure-all for helping truckers to complete their long routes without falling asleep, for weight control, for helping athletes to perform better and train longer, and for treating mild depression. Intravenous amphetamine abuse spread among a subculture known as "speed freaks." As time went on, it became evident that the dangers of abuse of these drugs outweighed most of their therapeutic uses.

In 1965, greater attempts to control amphetamines were instituted with amendments to the federal food and drug laws to curb the black market in amphetamines. Many pharmaceutical amphetamine products were removed from the market and doctors prescribed those that remained with reluctance. In order to meet the ever increasing black market demand for amphetamines, illegal laboratory production mushroomed, especially methamphetamine laboratories on the West Coast. Today, most amphetamines distributed to the black market are produced in clandestine laboratories.

Methamphetamine addiction is a problem that's unlikely to simply disappear. It is a drug that is easily obtained, inexpensive, user friendly and provides a number of reasons or excuses for abuse. Meth addiction also carries with it a terrible toll in the form of physical, mental, emotional and social devastation for the meth addict.

If you or someone you love suffers from a crystal meth addiction and needs treatment…. Please, please let Eastcoastdrugrehab.com help today!
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