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  2. Incapacitating agent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incapacitating_agent

    Incapacitating agent is a chemical or biological agent which renders a person unable to harm themselves or others, regardless of consciousness. [1]Lethal agents are primarily intended to kill, but incapacitating agents can also kill if administered in a potent enough dose, or in certain scenarios.

  3. Benzene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benzene

    Benzene is a colorless and highly flammable liquid with a sweet smell, and is partially responsible for the aroma of gasoline. It is used primarily as a precursor to the manufacture of chemicals with more complex structures, such as ethylbenzene and cumene , of which billions of kilograms are produced annually.

  4. Inhalant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inhalant

    The intoxication effects occur so quickly that the effects of inhalation can resemble the intensity of effects produced by intravenous injection of other psychoactive drugs. [ 61 ] Ethanol is also inhaled, either by vaporizing it by pouring it over dry ice in a narrow container and inhaling with a straw or by pouring alcohol in a corked bottle ...

  5. Food coloring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_coloring

    A variety of food colorings, added to beakers of water. Food coloring, color additive or colorant is any dye, pigment, or substance that imparts color when it is added to food or beverages. Colorants can be supplied as liquids, powders, gels, or pastes. Food coloring is commonly used in commercial products and in domestic cooking.

  6. Suave spray deodorants recalled for containing cancer-causing ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/suave-spray-deodorants...

    How harmful is benzene? Long-term exposure — meaning a year or more —to benzene can cause “harmful effects on the bone marrow and can cause a decrease in red blood cells, leading to anemia ...

  7. Should you throw out your black plastic cooking utensils? - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/black-plastic-spatulas...

    And of the amount that does make it into food, only a certain portion will be taken in by the body, Alan says. "Overall we don’t know how much makes it into our body and the effects that these ...

  8. Propylhexedrine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propylhexedrine

    The off-brown color gives rise to the slang term for this salt: "peanut butter". [29] Freebase propylhexedrine is a volatile, oily liquid at room temperature. The slow evaporation of freebase propylhexedrine allows it to be administered via inhalation. [30]

  9. Diacetyl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diacetyl

    It is a vicinal diketone (two C=O groups, side-by-side). Diacetyl occurs naturally in alcoholic beverages and some cheeses and is added as a flavoring to some foods to impart its buttery flavor. Chronic inhalation exposure to diacetyl fumes is a causative agent of the lung disease bronchiolitis obliterans, commonly known as "popcorn lung".