What Is the Drug Bath Salts Made of
Bath salts facts
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- Bath salts as drugs of abuse refer to a white powder or crystalline substance that has no bathing or other cosmetic use.
- The active ingredients in bath salts tend to be similar chemically and in their effects to stimulants like cocaine and amphetamines. Some have hallucinogenic effects.
- The occurrence of bath salts abuse in the United States has rapidly increased over the last few years, and many small stores sell the substance. (It's also available on the street, as well.)
- A number of the active ingredients in bath salts are considered quite addictive and dangerous. Laws in the majority of states, as well as federal law, have banned these ingredients.
- There are a number of biological, psychological, and social factors (called risk factors) that can increase a person's vulnerability to developing a bath salts use disorder.
- The signs and symptoms of bath salts intoxication tend to include feeling euphoric ("high"), sexually stimulated, thinking one is more focused, and having a high energy level for two to four hours after taking the drug.
- Several severe medical and emotional complications can result from bath salts abuse, including death.
- Health care professionals diagnose bath salts abuse and addiction by thoroughly gathering medical, family, and mental health information.
- The treatment of bath salts intoxication involves providing intensive medical monitoring and attention to address the specific symptoms the individual has.
- Treatment for the psychological symptoms of addiction likely takes a great deal longer than managing the medical problems involved.
New Type of Bath Salts
Flakka
What is Flakka?
Word on the street is that Flakka (also called gravel or flocka) is a combination of heroin and crack, or heroin and methamphetamines, but in reality, Flakka is just a newer-generation version of bath salts. Bath salts, in general, are synthetic psychoactive drugs made in large quantities in foreign drug labs. These drugs are all related to a broader group of chemical compounds known as cathinones. Each time one type of bath salt is made illegal, the drug labs change the chemical structure slightly and a new drug that is technically not illegal is created. In the case of Flakka, the new chemical is called alpha-PVP. Drug users take Flakka to get a feeling of euphoria, a heightened sense of awareness, stimulation, and energy.
What are bath salts, and how do people abuse bath salts?
Bath salts are a type of "designer" drug of abuse. The reason these drugs are commonly called bath salts is that they tend to be in the form of white or off-white powder or crystals. However, these substances are not at all the same as Epsom salts or the other bath salts in which people bathe. Many of the bath salt drugs include alpha-pyrrolidinopentiophenone (alpha-PVP), mephedrone, methylone, and methylenedioxypyrovalerone (MDPV or MDPK) and are synthetic drugs called cathinones, which exist in plants commonly called khat plants. These drugs and are chemically similar to stimulant chemicals like cocaine or amphetamines. MDPV or MDPK also have chemical similarities to hallucinogens like Ecstasy, which is a street name for methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA).
Some of the other many street or slang names for bath salts include plant food, Red Dove, Blue Silk, Vanilla Sky, Purple Wave, Ivory Wave, Bliss, White Lightning, White Dove, Super Coke, Tranquility, Zoom, Flakka, Cannibal, and Magic. Mephedrone also has street names like meow, drone, and meph. People take these so-called designer drugs by ingesting, smoking, sniffing, or injecting them.
The rate of abuse of bath salts rapidly increased from 2010 to 2011. For example, poison-control centers in the United States reportedly received 304 calls for the abuse of this drug in 2010. That number increased to 1,782 calls in just the first four months of 2011 and to more than 6,000 calls by the end of that year. Interestingly, there were fewer calls to poison-control centers in 2012 and 2013 (2,691 and 996, respectively). Through October 2015, that number further decreased to 451. The areas where these drugs are used have also seemed to expand; originally, most of the calls to poison-control centers came from Louisiana, Florida, and Kentucky but later came from 33 states.
Bath salts users tend to be male slightly more often than female and younger than the users of other drugs, and most use it at least weekly. Most bath salts users snort or otherwise inhale the drug, causing a more intense high and higher risk of addiction and complications.
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What is the history of bath salts?
Substances that cause the "high" (intoxication) often referred to as "bath salts" include methylone, mephedrone, and methylenedioxypyrovalerone (MDPV or MDPK). These active ingredients come from drugs called cathinones, which come from the East African plant called the Catha edulis. China manufactures bath salts, in tablet or powder form. These substances are often sold over the Internet, as well as over the counter (without prescription and having no medical use) in convenience and tobacco stores, gas stations, truck stops, pawn shops, in tattoo parlors, and on the street. In an attempt to avoid the legal consequences of the banned substances found in bath salts, drug dealers have apparently developed bath salts with other active ingredients. One of those is Cosmic Blast. Bath salts are sometimes referred to as "zombie" or "cannibal" because it was speculated that a person who engaged in cannibalism as part of an assault might have been intoxicated on the substance.
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Are bath salts addictive?
Given the similarities in effects that these drugs have to cocaine, methamphetamines, and other stimulant drugs of abuse, bath salts should be considered very addictive. Despite the newness of these drugs and resulting lack of sufficient research on bath salt-specific addiction in humans, animal research has already shown that these substances can be quite addicting. Therefore, health care professionals consider bath salts capable of wreaking the same addictive havoc on the lives of users as other stimulant drugs.
Are bath salts legal?
A majority of states has made a number of the active ingredients in bath salts illegal on the state level, and the United States federal government has made MDPV (an active ingredient in many bath salts) illegal due to the drug's tendency to cause symptoms of psychosis, like hallucinations, paranoia, as well as violence, in those who take it. The Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) now lists a number of the active ingredients found in bath salts as schedule I drugs, meaning they are illegal because they are understood to have a high potential for abuse, no currently accepted medical use in the United States, and no accepted safe use, so are deemed not fit for human consumption.
SLIDESHOW
Prescription Drug Abuse: Addiction, Health Risks, and Treatments See Slideshow
What are risk and protective (prevention) factors for bath salts use disorder?
As opposed to any specific direct causes, there are a number of biological, psychological, and social factors, called risk factors, which can increase a person's likelihood of developing a substance use disorder. The frequency that addictions to any drug, including bath salts, occur within some families seems to be higher than can be explained by the addictive environment of the family. Therefore, most substance-abuse professionals recognize a genetic aspect to the risk of this and other drug addictions. Mental health symptoms caused by bath salt use disorder include mood disorders like depression or anxiety. Social risk factors for bath salt use, as for any type of drug use disorder, include male gender, age 18 to 44 years old, unmarried marital status, and lower socioeconomic status and high levels of community violence. According to statistics by state, people residing in the West tend to be at higher risk for chemical dependency. As with substance use disorder in general, circumstances like receiving appropriate supervision, as well as clear messages from family members that drug use is unacceptable help prevent bath salt abuse and addiction.
What are the symptoms and signs of bath salts intoxication?
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The signs and symptoms of bath salts intoxication include:
- feeling euphoric ("high"),
- sexually stimulated,
- thinking one is more focused, and
- having high energy levels for two to four hours after taking the drug.
Feeling very let down for several hours to days thereafter tends to follow those symptoms.
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What are the side effects, complications, and prognosis of abusing bath salts?
Possible side effects and complications of even low doses of bath salts abuse include:
- rapid heart rate,
- chest pain,
- high blood pressure,
- feeling jittery or agitated, and
- having hallucinations, paranoia, or delirium.
The agitation and delirium can last for days. Other possible effects on the body from using these drugs, particularly with overdose, include:
- liver failure,
- seizures,
- heart attack,
- brain swelling, and
- severe fever (hyperthermia).
Emotional complications of bath salts abuse can include panic attacks and violence against oneself (suicidal thoughts or actions, or self-mutilation, as in cutting or burning oneself). Unfortunately, any of the complications described do not require long-term use of the drug in order to occur.
The bath salts abuser may develop thoughts, attempts, or acts of homicide or violence against others. Deaths from the medical problems associated with bath salts have occurred, as well.
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How do health care professionals diagnose bath salts use disorder?
As with any drug use disorder, bath salts use disorder is a condition that is characterized by a destructive pattern of using the drug(s) that leads to significant problems or distress, significant problems involving tolerance to or withdrawal from it, as well as other problems that the use of bath salts can cause for the sufferer, socially or in terms of the person's work or school performance. This pattern is manifested by at least two of the following warning signs or symptoms of drug use or abuse in the same one-year period:
- Recurrent bath salts use that results in a lack of meeting important obligations at work, school, or home
- Repeated bath salts use in situations that can be dangerous
- Continued bath salts use despite continued or repeated social or relationship problems as due to the drug's effects
- Tolerance, which is either significantly decreased effect of bath salts or a need to increase the amount used in order to achieve the same high or other desired effects
- Withdrawal, which is either physical or psychological signs or symptoms that characterize withdrawal from bath salts, or taking it or a substance that is chemically related in order to avoid developing symptoms of withdrawal
- Larger amounts of bath salts are taken or for longer than intended
- The individual experiences persistent desire to take the drug or has unsuccessful attempts to lessen or control its use
- People spend substantial amounts of time getting, using, or recovering from the effects of bath salts
- The person markedly reduces or stops participating in important social, recreational, work, or school activities because of using bath salts. The individual continues to use bath salts despite being aware that he or she suffers from ongoing or recurring physical or psychological problems caused or worsened by the use of the drug.
- Craving/a strong desire to use the substance
There is no single test that indicates someone has bath salts use disorder with complete certainty. Therefore, health care professionals diagnose this condition by thoroughly gathering medical, family, and mental health information. The practitioner will also either perform a physical examination or request that the individual's primary care doctor do so. The medical assessment usually includes lab tests to assess the person's general health and to explore whether or not the individual is using other drugs, has experienced exposure to any environmental toxins, or has a medical condition that includes mental health symptoms.
In asking questions about mental health symptoms, mental health practitioners are often trying to determine if the person suffers from depressive and/or manic symptoms, as well as whether the individual is anxious or suffers from, hallucinations, delusions, or some behavioral disorder. Health care professionals may provide the people they evaluate with a quiz or self-test to screen for substance use disorder. Since some of the symptoms of bath salts use disorder can also occur in other mental illnesses, the mental health screening helps determine if the individual suffers from bipolar disorder, an anxiety disorder, schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, or other psychotic disorder. Any disorder that is associated with sudden changes in behavior, mood, or thinking, like bipolar disorder, a psychotic disorder, borderline personality disorder, or dissociative identity disorder (DID), may be particularly challenging to distinguish from some symptoms of bath salts use disorder. In order to assess the person's current emotional state, health care professionals perform a mental-status examination, as well.
In addition to providing treatment that is appropriate to the diagnosis and to the person in need of it, determining the presence of mental illnesses that may co-occur (co-morbid/dual diagnosis) with bath salts use disorder is important in promoting the best possible outcome. Dual diagnosis of bath salts addicted individuals indicates the need for treatment that addresses both issues in an integrated fashion by practitioners with training and experience with helping this specific population.
What is the treatment for bath salts use disorder?
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The treatment of bath salts intoxication involves providing intensive medical monitoring and attention to address the specific symptoms of the individual. It also often involves using medications to alleviate medical symptoms of intoxication like nausea, insomnia and lack of appetite, as well as emotional symptoms like agitation.
The primary goals for the treatment of addiction symptoms (also called recovery) are abstinence, relapse prevention, and rehabilitation. When the addicted person first abstains from using drugs, he or she may need help avoiding or lessening the effects of withdrawal. That process is detoxification or detox. Medical professionals conduct that part of treatment in a hospital or other inpatient setting (often called detox centers), where medications used to decrease withdrawal symptoms and frequent medical assessments and care can be provided. As with many other drugs of abuse, the detox process from bath salts is likely the most difficult aspect of coping with the physical symptoms of addiction and tends to last for days.
People who may have less severe psychological symptoms of bath salts dependency may be able to be maintained in an outpatient treatment program. Those who have a more severe addiction, have relapsed after engaging in outpatient programs, or who also suffer from a severe mental illness might need the higher level of structure, guidance, and monitoring provided in an inpatient drug-treatment center, often referred to as "rehab." After inpatient treatment, many bath salts addicts may need to live in a sober-living community, that is, a group-home setting where counselors provide continued sobriety support and daily structure.
Another important aspect of treating bath salts addiction is helping family members and friends of the addicted person refrain from encouraging addictive behaviors (codependency). Whether codependent loved ones provide financial support, excuses, or refrain from acknowledging the addictive behaviors of the addict, discouraging such codependency of friends and family is a key part of the recovery of the affected individual. Focusing on the bath salts-addicted person's role in the family likely becomes even more urgent when that person is a child or teenager. Bath salts-dependency treatment for children and adolescents differs further from that in adults by the younger addict's tendency to need help finishing their education and achieving higher education or job training compared to addicts who may have completed those parts of their lives before acquiring the addiction.
Medically Reviewed on 1/13/2021
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What Is the Drug Bath Salts Made of
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