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In the United States, Under federal law the term drug paraphernalia means “any equipment, product or material of any kind which is primarily intended or designed for use in manufacturing, compounding, converting, concealing, producing, processing, preparing, injecting, ingesting, inhaling, or otherwise introducing into the human body a controlled substance.” [1]
Drug pipes are vessels used as drug paraphernalia to aid the smoking of hard drugs. They usually consist of a glass tube with or without a bulb, the latter particularly used when freebasing methamphetamine or crack cocaine .
In the mid-1970s, the sale of drug paraphernalia was outlawed in many places, and the distribution network for underground comics and newspapers dried up. [8] In addition, the retail mainstream discovered and co-opted aspects of the head shop's market niche, such as acid rock and eco-friendly products.
Drug paraphernalia: A glass bong dab Slang name for hash oil, a resin extracted from cannabis. [2] [See cannabis edibles and extracts.] dabbing A slang term for smoking or vape-ing hash oil, or "dabs", extracted from cannabis. [2] [See cannabis consumption.] dab rig Water pipe device for vaporizing hash oil. [21] [See drug paraphernalia.] dagga
A Zulu snuff spoon/comb (ivory, 19th century) Snuff spoons have a very long history. Archeologists found them, for example, at Chavín de Huántar site in Peru (presumably used for consumption of psychoactive preparations of Anadenanthera colubrina more than 2000 years ago), [7] as well as in South Africa, where a combination of a tiny comb and a little spoon had made some researchers to ...
Drugs and drug paraphernalia found at the L.A. home where rapper Coolio died last September led officials to rule his death an accident.
In addition to the added potency, the drug has a “low cost,” which leads drug dealers to mix fentanyl with drugs like “heroin, methamphetamine and cocaine, increasing the likelihood of a ...
Actual overdose from the drug does occur, however, and inhaled solvent use is statistically more likely to result in life-threatening respiratory depression than intravenous use of opioids such as heroin. Most deaths from solvent use could be prevented if individuals were resuscitated quickly when they stopped breathing and their airways ...