* Dilated Pupils. * Odd changes in behavior.
* Drastic change of emotions in a short period of time, going from scared to happy to angry. * Laughing, giggling. (Personal Experience)
LSD is not physically addictive. There are no physical withdrawal symptoms. It just wears off after awhile.
Having a very bad "trip."
There are no legitimate medical uses of LSD Many years ago researchers experimented with treating psychosis with LSD, but it only made symptoms worse.
LSD has next to no hangover effects, other than being really tired the next day or so.
They have a powerful hallucinogenic effect similar to LSD.
someone on LSD
There is no drug or compound that will magically cure LSD intoxication. However, there are many drugs which can be given to someone on LSD that can reduce the symptoms of LSD intoxication help calm the user. Benzodiazepine medications (Xanax, Klonopin, Valium, Ativan) are given to reduce anxiety but will not reduce hallucinations. Atypical antipsychotics (quetiapine, risperidone) are given to sedate the user and reduce hallucinations.
Window Pane is the name for LSD in a gelatin. They probably put liquid LSD on some placebo powder, just like when people drop LSD on a sugar cube. Someone please correst this if I'm wrong, thanks.
flashback
An overdose of LSD substantial enough to cause life-threatening physical symptoms is thousands of times the recreational dose, and therefore is not typically a risk to the average user. However, LSD may certainly cause frightening psychological effects and a risk for dangerous behavior when ingested in excess.
One common method for dispensing LSD is to drop a small amount of a solution containing LSD onto a piece of blotting paper, which may or may not have artwork on it. That's about as definitive as I'm willing to get. Certainly not every piece of blottting paper has LSD on it, and it's certainly possible for someone to draw pictures on blotting paper which does not have LSD on it. (Another method for distributing LSD was to use an eyedropper to place a drop of LSD solution on a sugar cube. Obviously not every sugar cube has LSD in it, though!)
LSD is no more addictive than Television. Lysergic acid Dilythimide (LSD) is the only content, originaly developed to treat cluster headaches (migrains) it is derived from the ergot that grows on the mold of the rye plant.