at times, it can be
You have a rough home life or there is peer pressure. These and any other outside influence that would cause you to use drugs are environmental factors
Hypoglycemic syndromes are classified as drug-induced or (most common)non-drug induced.
This is the age old question of nature vs. nurture. There are arguments for both sides. The genetic component of overuse of any substance (drugs, alcohol, food etc.) has been linked to how people's brains work. I have heard that the pleasure center is what controls our thinking about what we need. To some extent, seritonin levels are affected by what we ingest and people tend to self-medicate to make themselves feel right. An argument for nurture is that the way you were raised from babyhood on has an effect. Or that your experience in society affects your choices.
Drug-induced hypoglycemia, a complication of diabetes, is the most commonly seen and most dangerous form of hypoglycemia.
Bonnye L. Matthews has written: 'Ki'ti's Story, 75,000 BC' 'Chemical sensitivity' -- subject(s): Allergy, Chemically induced, Drug Hypersensitivity, Environmental Exposure, Environmentally induced diseases, Indoor air pollution, Occupational diseases, Sick building syndrome
People begin to use drugs for a variety of reasons, some of which may have to do with environment. Beyond a certain point, however, the individual's brain undergoes changes that cause them to need the drug to function in a way that approaches normal. At that point they are addicted, and the influences have become internal.
A drug induced erection.
This term refers to lupus that develops after a patient has taken a medication. Medications that can trigger drug-induced lupus include procainamide or hydralazine
His official cause of death was acute Propofol intoxication, so it was a drug induced cardiac arrest.
Inflammation of the liver due to an adverse reaction with a drug.
Recent studies have shown that many of these environmentally induced differences are acquired via the epigenome.
Julian Aleksandrowicz has written: 'Leukemia ecology' -- subject(s): Leukemia, Etiology, Environmentally induced diseases