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Difference between revisions of "Terminology"

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; insomnia : difficulty in going to sleep or in getting enough sleep
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; joints : marijuana cigarettes
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; LD50 : the amount of a material, given all at once, which causes the death of 50% (one half) of a group of test animals. The LD50 is one way to measure the short-term poisoning potential (acute toxicity) of a material
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; local anaesthetic : involves numbing an area of the body using a type of medication called a local anaesthetic
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; myocardial infarction : a heart attack
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; nystagmus : rapid involuntary rhythmic movement of the eyes
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; optical sliding : described as a physical effect which inhibits the coordination and control of one's eyes by suppressing their ability to keep them still. This results in the orientation of one's eyes continuously moving in a variety of directions and the sensation of not being able to stare motionless at any particular point becoming present
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; paranoia : suspicion, distrust or fear of other people
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; PIED : performance and image enhancing drugs
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; placebo : A substance that has positive effects as a result of a patient's perception that it is beneficial rather than as a result of a causative ingredient. It is an inactive substance or preparation used as a control in an experiment or test to determine the effectiveness of a medicinal drug
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; polydrug use : the use of several different drugs over a short period of time, or two or more drugs used simultaneously
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; psychonauts : a person who explores, experiences, and studies their subconscious and subjective reality through the use of a range drugs
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; psychotic : this is a mental state when you see or hear things which aren't there and have delusions
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; quality of life : the overall enjoyment of life, a sense of well-being, and the ability to carry out routine activities
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; R : the unit of South African currency - the Rand
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; ROA : route of administration - how the drug gets into your body
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; schizophrenia : a severe mental disorder with symptoms such as hallucinations, paranoia, and disorganised thinking
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; spontaneous tactile sensations : these can be described as the physical experience of an activation of nerve endings across the body occurring without any obvious or immediate physical trigger. The experience of this results in feelings of distinct random tactile input and general tingling sensations. Depending on the psychoactive substance consumed, these vary greatly in their alternative styles of sensation, but can be broken down into three basic levels of intensity. These are described and listed here - 1. Mild - The lowest level of the sensation can be described as light and fleeting tingling sensations across the body that do not impair physical motor control and can essentially be ignored if one wishes to do so, and - 2. Distinct - At this level, the sensation becomes impossible to ignore. It can be described as distinct tingling sensations which are intense enough to partially impair a person’s motor control and cause a significant portion of mental focus to be directed towards these sensations, and - 3. Overwhelming - The highest level occurs when the tingling sensations have increased enough to become a powerful, uncontrollable focus point of attention. This feels completely overwhelming and impairs a person's motor control, consistently leaving them either lying or sitting down, incapable of standing up, or writhing in the all-encompassing sensations
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; stimulant : a drug that acts on the Central Nervous System, increasing some rates of function such as heart-rate
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; SSDS : sudden sniffing death syndrome
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; styptic : a drug used to staunch bleeding
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; synaesthesia : a condition in which normally separate senses are fused, in which one type of stimulation evokes the sensation of another, as when the hearing of a sound produces the visualisation of a colour
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; tachycardia : rapid pulse rate
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; teratogenic : having the ability to disturb the growth and development of an embryo or foetus
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; trisma : jaw clenching
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; VSA : stands for Volatile Substance Abuse. It has previously been called "Glue Sniffing" and "Solvent Abuse". The VSA term is now used to include all the volatile substances including gases such as butane and Aerosols which can be "sniffed" for their effects

Revision as of 12:47, 28 March 2017

insomnia 
difficulty in going to sleep or in getting enough sleep
joints 
marijuana cigarettes
LD50 
the amount of a material, given all at once, which causes the death of 50% (one half) of a group of test animals. The LD50 is one way to measure the short-term poisoning potential (acute toxicity) of a material
local anaesthetic 
involves numbing an area of the body using a type of medication called a local anaesthetic
myocardial infarction 
a heart attack
nystagmus 
rapid involuntary rhythmic movement of the eyes
optical sliding 
described as a physical effect which inhibits the coordination and control of one's eyes by suppressing their ability to keep them still. This results in the orientation of one's eyes continuously moving in a variety of directions and the sensation of not being able to stare motionless at any particular point becoming present
paranoia 
suspicion, distrust or fear of other people
PIED 
performance and image enhancing drugs
placebo 
A substance that has positive effects as a result of a patient's perception that it is beneficial rather than as a result of a causative ingredient. It is an inactive substance or preparation used as a control in an experiment or test to determine the effectiveness of a medicinal drug
polydrug use 
the use of several different drugs over a short period of time, or two or more drugs used simultaneously
psychonauts 
a person who explores, experiences, and studies their subconscious and subjective reality through the use of a range drugs
psychotic 
this is a mental state when you see or hear things which aren't there and have delusions
quality of life 
the overall enjoyment of life, a sense of well-being, and the ability to carry out routine activities
the unit of South African currency - the Rand
ROA 
route of administration - how the drug gets into your body
schizophrenia 
a severe mental disorder with symptoms such as hallucinations, paranoia, and disorganised thinking
spontaneous tactile sensations 
these can be described as the physical experience of an activation of nerve endings across the body occurring without any obvious or immediate physical trigger. The experience of this results in feelings of distinct random tactile input and general tingling sensations. Depending on the psychoactive substance consumed, these vary greatly in their alternative styles of sensation, but can be broken down into three basic levels of intensity. These are described and listed here - 1. Mild - The lowest level of the sensation can be described as light and fleeting tingling sensations across the body that do not impair physical motor control and can essentially be ignored if one wishes to do so, and - 2. Distinct - At this level, the sensation becomes impossible to ignore. It can be described as distinct tingling sensations which are intense enough to partially impair a person’s motor control and cause a significant portion of mental focus to be directed towards these sensations, and - 3. Overwhelming - The highest level occurs when the tingling sensations have increased enough to become a powerful, uncontrollable focus point of attention. This feels completely overwhelming and impairs a person's motor control, consistently leaving them either lying or sitting down, incapable of standing up, or writhing in the all-encompassing sensations
stimulant 
a drug that acts on the Central Nervous System, increasing some rates of function such as heart-rate
SSDS 
sudden sniffing death syndrome
styptic 
a drug used to staunch bleeding
synaesthesia 
a condition in which normally separate senses are fused, in which one type of stimulation evokes the sensation of another, as when the hearing of a sound produces the visualisation of a colour
tachycardia 
rapid pulse rate
teratogenic 
having the ability to disturb the growth and development of an embryo or foetus
trisma 
jaw clenching
VSA 
stands for Volatile Substance Abuse. It has previously been called "Glue Sniffing" and "Solvent Abuse". The VSA term is now used to include all the volatile substances including gases such as butane and Aerosols which can be "sniffed" for their effects