Addiction leading to death.
yes !
Some Kind of Heroin was created in 2005.
It harms you because, if you don't die after your first bump of it, you're gonna be hopelessly addicted
No. Some heroin addicts manage to quit taking heroin permanently. But they are the minority.
it has some powder called heroin on the box it has some powder called heroin on the box
Heroin negatively affects your health because it is a highly addictive drug. It is extremely hard to detox and takes a long time to leave the system.
No. There is no heroin in any over-the-counter or prescription sleeping pills. Heroin is almost never sold as anything else. Heroin is considered an opiate. Some opiates that are similar to heroin can be found in prescription painkillers, but not sleeping pills.
methadone is a substitute for heroin. it taakes away the cravings from heroin and u should not use methadone & heroin cuz depending on the mg of methadone your on the methadone blocks the heroin when you do it (heroin)..
PCP is sometimes considered an hallucinogen because it has some of the same effects. However, it does not fit easily into any one drug
As far as social harm, the world's champion in this category is the very, very legal Alcohol. More people drink to excess than take meth, crack or heroin.
Heroin can basically harm every major organ in your body, skin, and other parts that can't be mentioned. -- No, heroin itself, and other opiates are not harmful to the liver, nor to any other organ of the body. Opiates like heroin are some of the most studied drugs we have, and have been shown to be quite harmless at normal dosages, even for chronic use. The harms that some addicts experience come mainly from improper or long-term injection practices, re-use of needles which become dull or barbed, impurities, and variable and unknowable potency. Other harms result from poor nutrition and hygiene, which themselves are the result of the vastly over-inflated prices paid on the black market. Almost all the harm associated with heroin use is a direct or indirect consequence of prohibition, rather than from the drug itself.
A junkie, an addict, or a drug abuser. Some people call heroin abusers horse heads, horse being another term for heroin.