Heroin is physically addictive because it is an opiate, and all opiates are physically addictive.
Heroin is psychologically addictive because it produces desirable feelings and emotions in the user, and also because when the user is physically addicted, they will become physically sick if they do not have their dose. They develop an aversion to doing without because of this.
Tranquilizers are addictive both psychologically and physically. Some -- such as Valium -- even have potentially fatal withdrawal symptoms.
Both alcohol and opiates (opium, heroin, morphine, oxycodone, hydrocodone, hydromorphone, fentanyl, Suboxone, etc.) are physically addictive. As far as I know, they are the only drugs that are physically addictive. Amphetamines, methamphetamines and cocaine are extremely psychologically addictive, as well as chemically addictive, but not physically addictive. Ecstasy also has a fairly high potential for psychological and chemical addiction, but it is not as addictive as speed, meth, or coke. Hallucinogens (LSD, marijuana, salvia, peyote, mescaline) are neither chemically addictive nor physically addictive. They can be psychologically addictive, though.
Mushrooms are no more additive than any other foods.The hallucinogens found in some mushrooms may become psychologically additive to those will little or no will power or self discipline.
opiates get in you whole body system, blood, brain tissues, bone marrow, and all muscles
Ecstasy and heroin are both very dangerous and addictive drugs. Do not use them.
Heroin and methamphetamine are both much more addictive than crack.
No there is not "heroin" in "roxis" aka a 30mg oxycodone but they are both opiates so they are in the same family but it does have a similar high and the same addictive potential.
No. Oxycontin contains oxycodone where as heroin is diacetylmorphine. Both are opiates.
Quantifying the "addictiveness" of a drug is difficult, because each person's brain chemistry is slightly different and the values therefore differ from one person to another. Suffice it to say that both are highly addictive. Of the two, nicotine is probably the sneakier.
Because fast foods are readily available when someone is in a hurry.
Hyperactivity
Heroin is in its pure state and bonds to opiate receptors in the brain far better than morphine and codeine. Codeine is a derivative of opium where as heroin is actual opium. Codeine and Morphine are broken down and made relatively safe by pharmaceutical companies, where as heroin is made to be strong, without proper dosing. They both (codeine, morphine) bond differently than heroin and to less receptors in the brain, making them less effective, as well as addictive. Both are still very addictive, beware.