Inhalants
What is it?
Inhalants are ordinary household products that are inhaled
or sniffed by children to get high. There are hundreds of household products on the market today that can
be misused as inhalants.
What
does it look like?
Examples
of products kids abuse to get high include model airplane
glue, nail polish remover, cleaning fluids, hair spray,
gasoline, the propellant in aerosol whipped cream, spray
paint, fabric protector, air conditioner fluid (freon),
cooking spray and correction fluid.
How
is it used?
These
products are sniffed, snorted, bagged (fumes inhaled from a
plastic bag), or "huffed" (inhalant-soaked rag,
sock, or roll of toilet paper in the mouth) to achieve a
high. Inhalants are also sniffed directly from the
container.
Inhalants
are breathable chemical vapors that produce psychoactive
(mind-altering) effects. Although people are exposed to
volatile solvents and other inhalants in the home and in the
workplace, many do not think of inhalable substances as
drugs because most of them were never meant to be used in
that way.
Young
people are likely to abuse inhalants, in part because
inhalants are readily available and inexpensive. Sometimes
children unintentionally misuse inhalant products that are
found in household products. Parents should see that these
substances are monitored closely so that they are not
inhaled by young children.
Inhalants
fall into the following categories:
-
industrial
or household solvents or solvent-containing
products, including paint thinners or solvents,
degreasers (dry-cleaning fluids), gasoline, and
glues
-
art
or office supply solvents, including correction
fluids, felt-tip-marker fluid, and electronic
contact cleaners
-
gases
used in household or commercial products,
including butane lighters and propane tanks,
whipping cream aerosols or dispensers
(whippets), and refrigerant gases
-
household
aerosol propellants and associated solvents in
items such as spray paints, hair or deodorant
sprays, and fabric protector sprays
-
medical
anesthetic gases, such as ether, chloroform,
halothane, and nitrous oxide (laughing gas)
-
aliphatic
nitrites, including cyclohexyl nitrite, which is
available to the general public; amyl nitrite,
which is available only by prescription; and
butyl nitrite, which is now an illegal
substance.
Health
Hazards
Although
different in makeup, nearly all abused inhalants produce
effects similar to anesthetics, which act to slow down the
body's functions. When inhaled via the nose or mouth into
the lungs in sufficient concentrations, inhalants can cause
intoxicating effects. Intoxication can last only a few
minutes or several hours if inhalants are taken repeatedly.
Initially, users may feel slightly stimulated; with
successive inhalations, they may feel less inhibited and
less in control; finally, a user can lose consciousness.
Sniffing
highly concentrated amounts of the chemicals in solvents or
aerosol sprays can directly induce heart failure and death.
This is especially common from the abuse of fluorocarbons
and butane-type gases. High concentrations of inhalants also
cause death from suffocation by displacing oxygen in the
lungs and then in the central nervous system so that
breathing ceases. Other irreversible effects caused by
inhaling specific solvents are as follows:
-
Hearing
loss - toluene (paint sprays, glues, dewaxers) and
trichloroethylene (cleaning fluids, correction
fluids)
-
Peripheral
neuropathies or limb spasms - hexane (glues,
gasoline) and nitrous oxide (whipping cream, gas
cylinders)
-
Central
nervous system or brain damage - toluene (paint
sprays, glues, dewaxers)
-
Bone
marrow damage - benzene (gasoline).
Serious
but potentially reversible effects include:
-
Liver
and kidney damage - toluene- containing substances
and chlorinated hydrocarbons (correction fluids,
dry- cleaning fluids)
-
Blood
oxygen depletion - organic nitrites
("poppers," "bold," and
"rush") and methylene chloride (varnish
removers, paint thinners).
Death
from inhalants usually is caused by a very high
concentration of fumes. Deliberately inhaling from an
attached paper or plastic bag or in a closed area greatly
increases the chances of suffocation. Even when using
aerosols or volatile products for their legitimate purposes
(i.e., painting, cleaning), it is wise to do so in a
well-ventilated room or outdoors.
Amyl
and butyl nitrites have been associated with Kaposi's
sarcoma (KS), the most common cancer reported among AIDS
patients. Early studies of KS showed that many people with
KS had used volatile nitrites. Researchers are continuing to
explore the hypothesis of nitrites as a factor contributing
to the development of KS in HIV-infected people.
What
is its federal classification?
Inhalants
are legally sold products.
|