The use of methamphetamine has been growing in the United States throughout the 2000s
The use of methamphetamine has been growing in the United States throughout the 2000s
Methamphetamine use can cause severe neurological damage.
I do not believe that there is any legitimate use for methamphetamine. A good place to check would be on WebMD. They may have better information.
Thomas E Feucht has written: 'Methamphetamine use among adult arrestees' -- subject(s): Amphetamine abuse, Methamphetamine
there are about 1000 to 1500 teens using meth
Yes, methamphetamine can be detected after the first use.
If this is for a persuasive essay, state 3 reasons why methamphetamine should or should not be used. Should have structure somewhat like "I believe that methamphetamine should (or should not) be used because (reason #1), (reason #2), and (reason #3)."
No, but it is an amphetamine. "Pharmaceutical" meth. The only thing that contains methamphetamine is methamphetamine.
No, they do not contain methamphetamine.
30 days
Yes, and especially methamphetamines. Users have impaired restraint and judgement, and eventually psychosis. The high addictiveness of meth means addicts will do almost anything to get more.The above answer is not accurate:1) There is methamphetamine. There aren'tmethamphetamine(s).2) There is currently insufficient evidence to infer a direct causal link between methamphetamine use and violence, but there is considerable evidence that the two entitie sare related.3) The strongest evidence for a relationship between methamphetamine use and violence is in the context of methamphetamine-induced psychosis. In this context, violence is likely to be related topersecutory delusions and perceived threat. There is also experimental evidence that chronic use of the drug increases the risk of violent behaviour, and a proportion of chronic methamphetamine users reportproblems controlling violent behaviour.4) Despite this evidence, it is not clear whether violent behaviour among chronic methamphetamine users is due to methamphetamine use per se or co-occurring factors (e.g. alcohol use, psychiatric status, personality, lifestyle associated with illicit drug use).5) Acute intoxication with methamphetamine alone does not appear to lead to violent behaviour, but it may enhance aggression in someone who is otherwise provoked.In conclusion, there is currently insuffi cient empirical data to estimate whether, or to what extent, methamphetamine use has increased assaults.
Methamphetamine breaks down into amphetamine in the bloodstream, just through a much quicker process than regular amphetamine, that is why it is stronger. Using methamphetamine and amphetamine together is not safe if you don't know how much amphetamine is getting into your bloodstream from the combination of the two.