Inhalants are a chemically diverse group of psychoactive substances composed of organic solvents and volatile substances commonly found in more than 1000 common household products, such as adhesives, hair spray, air fresheners, gasoline, lighter fluid, and paint.
The practice of inhaling such substances is sometimes colloquially referred to as huffing, sniffing or chroming; or, more formally, solvent abuse.
Solvents are some of the most dangerous substances used recreationally, and can cause serious damage to the brain and central nervous system, and are generally only used by young substance abusers or as a desperate last resort for financially deprived drug addicts. While not regulated in the United States under the Controlled Substances Act, many states have placed restrictions on the sale of these products to minors.
Although inhalant abusers may prefer one particular substance because of the odor or taste, a variety of substances may be used because of their similar effects, availability, and cost. Once inhaled, the extensive capillary surface of the lungs allows rapid absorption of the substance, and blood levels peak rapidly. Entry into the brain is so fast that the effects of inhalation can resemble the intensity of effects produced by intravenous injection of other psychoactive drugs.
Inhalants are readily available, inexpensive, and easy to conceal. Therefore, they are increasingly popular with young people and are, for many, one of the first substances abused.
In the United States the extent of the inhalant problem among children and adolescents was, at first, virtually unrecognized by the general public. However, an event in early 1999 called national attention to this severe problem. Five high school girls were killed in a car accident outside Philadelphia, and the coroner's report showed that four of the five, including the driver, had ingested "significant" amounts of a computer keyboard cleaner. Since this event, there has been an increased awareness of the threat of inhalant abuse.
Petrol sniffing became common on Russian ships following attempts to limit the supply of alcohol to crew in the 1980s. The documentary Children Underground depicts the huffing of Aurolac by Romanian homeless children. Petrol sniffing also occurs in some remote indigenous communities in developed countries.
Inhalants do not directly displace oxygen except in extremely high concentrations, however hypoxia can theoretically become an issue with some methods of use such as huffing from a plastic bag if fresh air is not breathed often enough.* However, some inhalants are heavier-than-air gases, and if regular breathing is not maintained, they will remain in the lungs instead of being naturally expelled.
The contraption on the cover of the Ween album The Pod is not a Scotchguard inhalation device, but a bong-like device used with Marijuana.
In the 1996 film Citizen Ruth, the character Ruth huffs patio sealant from a paper bag.
Former Howard Stern Show cast member John Melendez would inhale the compressed nitrous oxide found in whipped cream cans – popularly known as "whippits."
Primus's 1998 song Laquerhead is about adolescents who use inhalants to get high.
In the movie Love Liza, the lead actor played by Philip Seymour Hoffman, develops a gasoline addiction.
Schnüffelstoff | Inhalante | inhalan | Wziewne środki odurzające
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