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About Inhalants |
| People using inhalants frequently do risky or humiliating things they later regret. |
| Sudden death | |
| Suffocation | |
| Visual hallucinations and severe mood swings | |
| Numbness and tingling of the hands and feet |
| Headache, muscle weakness, abdominal pain | |
| Decrease or loss of sense of smell | |
| Nausea and nosebleeds | |
| Hepatitis | |
| Violent behavior | |
| Irregular heartbeat | |
| Liver, lung, and kidney impairment | |
| Brain damage | |
| Nervous system damage | |
| Dangerous chemical imbalances in the body | |
| Involuntary passing of urine and feces | |
| Long-term use of inhalants has been associated with irreversible brain damage. | |
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Using inhalants, even one time, can kill you. | |
| Short-term effects of inhalants include heart palpitations, breathing difficulty, dizziness, and headache. |
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According to medical experts, death can occur in at least five ways:
When inhalant use continues over a period of time, a user will probably develop a tolerance to inhalants. This means that the user will need more frequent use and greater amounts of a substance to achieve the effect desired. This, in turn, leaves a user at much greater risk of suffering from possible negative effects of the drug, such as liver, lung, and kidney impairment, brain damage, nervous system damage, and even death.
Physical dependence can also result, and when a user tries to give up the inhalant habit, withdrawal symptoms such as hallucinations, headaches, chills, delirium tremors, and stomach cramps may occur.
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Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
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