Drugs can affect anyone in any state of mind, while consciousness or not.
I believe the term for that is a "psychoactive drug."
After the accident, the patient lost consciousness.Regaining consciousness, the woman could not recall what happened.In the 1960s, LSD users believed the drug raised their consciousness.
Analgesic
The motto of Beckley Foundation is 'Consciousness and Drug Policy Research'.
(I am not a doctor) Lamictal will only affect a drug test if it's included in the list of drugs they're looking for. It is of course a "controlled substance" and if you aren't prescribed it, you shouldn't be taking it.
No because it is not considered a drug.
If an over the counter drug might affect your ability to drive it will
TDM is important for patients who have other diseases that can affect drug levels, or who take other medicines that may affect drug levels by interacting with the drug being tested.
Sleeping pills and other sleep medication and alcohol are both considered depressants. Thus, they will result to reduced levels of energy and alertness. Combining both can result to loss of consciousness.
Yes, the fluidity of a certain drug can affect the effectiveness of that particular drug.
a person's level of consciousness is the level of awareness they presently exhibit. For example, under certain types of anesthesia, people can seemingly be alert and answer questions, but not feel the searing pain of the knife rip open their flesh as the doctor operates. In this type of consciousness, the patient is under a drug's affect that alters their level of consciousness.Another level of consciousness is sleep. That one is obvious.Another is after a hit to the head a person may be responsive, but doesn't make any sense and is barely "awake."
Phenylpropanylmine is a psychoactive drug. a psychoactive drug is a chemical substance that acts on the central nervous system altering brain function resulting in changes to perception, mood, consciousness and behavior.