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Heroin As A Drug Free World

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It is estimated that 9.2 million people in the world currently are addicted to heroin. In 2007, the National Survey on Drug Use and Health reported 153,000 current heroin users in the United States. (Foundation for a Drug-Free World, 2017). Diacetylmorphine, more commonly known as heroin, was developed in 1874 when an English scientist, C.R. Alder Wright from St. Mary’s Hospital in London, attached two acetyl groups to morphine. This change was so significant because it made a product that was three times more potent than morphine. (Hart & Ksir, 2015, pg. 301) By 1898, Felix Hoffman synthesized heroin, and Bayer Laboratories put it on the market as a treatment for many respiratory ailments. Initially heroin was intended to replace …show more content…

This can further be explained by endorphins and enkephalins which are neurotransmitters in the brain that are similar to morphine naturally. As far as, short term effects of the drug, other than the euphoria, user experience severe itching, dry mouth, flushing of the skin, clouded mental functioning and “nodding out” which is “a back and forth state of being conscious and semi-conscious” (NIDA, 2017) Heroin users develop tolerance to the drug after continued use. Our text states, that “repeated use results in a decreased effect, which can be over-come by increasing the dose.” (Hart & Ksir, 2015, pg. 312) Recreational users experience the need to use a larger amount of heroin in order to get the desired results. This, in addition to the fact that when you are buying heroin on the street one cannot be sure of the potency or content of the drug, creates high potential for overdose. Large amounts of heroin can depress the respiratory rate and cause breathing to slow or stop. When breathing decreases or stops, oxygen is cut off from the brain and coma, brain damage and death can occur. A drug was developed to reverse the effects of a heroin or opiate overdose called Naloxone, which binds to opioid

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