Amphetamine

Methamphetamine, Ecstasy, MDA, Eve
(Stimulant)

ANALYTE: Amphetamine, Methamphetamine, MDMA (Ecstasy), MDA, MDEA (Eve)

STREET NAMES/SLANG TERMS:
Amphetamine - Speed, Uppers, Pep Pills, Bennies, Black Beauties
Methamphetamine - Speed, Chalk, Crank, Croak, Crypto, Crystal, Fire, Glass, Meth, Tweek , White Cross
Ecstasy - Ecstasy, Eve, E, X, XTC, Adam, Essence, Roll, Love Drug

DESCRIPTION: Amphetamine - A psychostimulant drug that is known to produce increased wakefulness and focus in association with decreased fatigue and appetite.
Methamphetamine - An addictive stimulant that strongly activates certain systems in the brain.
MDMA or Ecstasy (3-4-methylenedioxymethampheta-mine), is a synthetic drug with amphetamine-like and hallucinogenic properties.

WHAT DOES IT LOOK LIKE? Amphetamine - Illicit amphetamine appears as crystals, chunks, and fine to coarse powders, off-white to yellow in color, and supplied loose (in plastic or foil bags) or in capsules or tablets of various sizes and colors.
Methamphetamine - A crystal-like powdered substance that sometimes comes in large rock-like chunks. When the powder flakes off the rock, the shards look like glass. Meth is white or slightly yellow, depending on the purity.
Ecstasy comes in a tablet form that is often branded, e.g. Playboy bunnies, Nike swoosh, CK

HOW IS IT USED? The drug may be sniffed, smoked, injected, or taken orally in tablet or capsule form.
Taken in pill form, users sometimes take Ecstasy at "raves," clubs and other parties to keep on dancing and for mood enhancement.

SHORT TERM EFFECTS: Amphetamines, like adrenaline, affect not only the brain but also the heart, lungs, and many other organs. . At low doses, such as those prescribed medically, physical effects include loss of appetite, rapid breathing and heartbeat, high blood pressure, and dilated pupils. Larger doses may produce fever, sweating, headache, blurred vision, and dizziness. And very high doses may cause flushing, pallor, very rapid or irregular heartbeat, tremors, loss of coordination, and collapse.
Methamphetamine - Immediately after smoking or injection, the user experiences an intense sensation, called a "rush" or "flash," that lasts only a few minutes and is described as extremely pleasurable. After the initial "rush," there is typically a state of high agitation that in some individuals can lead to violent behavior. Other possible immediate effects include increased wakefulness and insomnia, decreased appetite, irritability/aggression, anxiety, nervousness, convulsions and heart attack.
Ecstasy - Users report that Ecstasy produces intensely pleasurable effects Ð including an enhanced sense of self-confidence and energy. Effects include feelings of peacefulness, acceptance and empathy. Users say they experience feelings of closeness with others and a desire to touch others. Other effects can include involuntary teeth clenching, a loss of inhibitions, transfixion on sights and sounds, nausea, blurred vision, chills and/or sweating. Increases in heart rate and blood pressure, as well as seizures, are also possible. The stimulant effects of the drug enable users to dance for extended periods, which when combined with the hot crowded conditions usually found at raves, can lead to severe dehydration and hyperthermia or dramatic increases in body temperature. This can lead to muscle breakdown and kidney, liver and cardiovascular failure. Cardiovascular failure has been reported in some of the Ecstasy-related fatalities. After-effects can include sleep problems, anxiety and depression.

LONG TERM EFFECTS: Because amphetamines specifically suppress appetite, chronic heavy users generally fail to eat properly and thus develop various illnesses related to vitamin deficiencies and malnutrition. Users may also be more prone to illness because they are generally run down, lack sleep, and live in an unhealthy environment. Chronic heavy users may also develop a mental disturbance very similar to paranoid schizophrenia. Methamphetamine is addictive, and users can develop a tolerance quickly, needing larger amounts to get high. Chronic use can cause paranoia, hallucinations, repetitive behavior (such as compulsively cleaning, grooming or disassembling and assembling objects), and delusions of parasites or insects crawling under the skin. Users can obsessively scratch their skin to get rid of these imagined insects. Long-term use, high dosages, or both can bring on full-blown toxic psychosis (often exhibited as violent, aggressive behavior). This violent, aggressive behavior is usually coupled with extreme paranoia. Methamphetamine use can also cause strokes and death.
Repeated use of Ecstasy ultimately may damage the cells that produce serotonin, which has an important role in the regulation of mood, appetite, pain, learning and memory. It produces nerve cell damage and can result in psychiatric disturbances and long term cognitive impairments.