no
Yes, PCP has a medical use as a veterinary anesthetic/tranquilizer primarily used on large animals such as horses.
PCP is phencyclidine, a chemical with powerful dissociative effects. Due to its relatively high potency, somewhat low cost of production, and the fact that it is often used to lace marijuana, it would be fairly rare for it to be cut with any other chemicals.
PCP the drug phencyclidine was first developed as a veterinary anesthetic.
Phencyclidine, or PCP, is a dissociative anesthetic. PCP has both hallucinogen and stimulant effects. Effects include feelings of sedation, euphoria, calmness, feelings of being "out of body," illusions and hallucinations, distorted sensory perceptions, and agitation. It was developed and used as an anesthetic, then as veterinary anesthetic. PCP is also known as Angel Dust, Killer Weed, Embalming Fluid, Rocket Fuel, Crystal, Wet, Water, Wack, Fry, Amp, Formaldehyde, Zoot, and Hog.
In the 1950s, PCP was being investigated as a possible dissociative anesthetic in humans.
No, PCP is not considered an opiate. It is a dissociative anesthetic.
Phencyclidine also known as PCP was first made in the 1926 by Parke, Davis, and Company. But it wasn't until the 1950's that it was used as an anesthetic for humans called Sernyl. It was eventually used as a tranquilizer for animals by veterinary institutes. Its use in humans was stopped in 1965 because the patients became delusional, irrational, and easily agitated after they stopped taking the drug. Today it is rarely used for medicinal reasons even for animals. PCP is considered an illegal drug but it is still manufactured in laboratories and sold on the streets by a variety of different names, such as angel dust, supergrass, ozone, and rocket fuel.
PCP, which is normally used as a tranquilizer in larger animals and is also known as "angel dust" and "sherm" is a dissociative anesthetic that causes hallucinations. Therefore, it is classified as a hallucinogen.
PCP is a schedule 2 drug in the US, and was first developed as an anesthetic before government testing showed it to have adverse affects on people, so they made it illegal to own. Was patented and produced by the Parke-Davis company in 1956 as the anesthetic Sernyl, but was later discontinued in 1978, again due to side effects that it caused. Used in the 1960's as a veterinary anesthetic. Side effects: respiratory problems, slurred speech, severe agitation, flash backs, convulsions, a loss in coordination, anxiety, paranoia, violent hostility, psychotic breaks and amnesia.
PCP is a dissociative anesthetic and hallucinogen.
Angel Dust is the street term for Phencyclidine (PCP). PCP is a powerful dissociative anesthetic and hallucinogen which antagonizes NMDA receptors.
There is no plant. Angel Dust is slang for PCP (Phencyclidine). PCP is completely synthetic and must be synthesized in a lab with chemicals. Also, a fun fact... PCP was originally used as an anasthaetic, but was discontinued due to it's dissociative psychedelic side effects.