2012-04-11

Symptoms of Meth Addiction

Methamphetamine or meth is a highly-addictive purely-synthetic drug that can be manufactured by using products commercially ready everywhere in the United States.

A person gets hooked on meth because of its enhancing effects on delight and sex, alertness and potential to focus on single tasks. However, the effects decrease over time, and users need to take higher doses to get the same results, and because they have great difficulty functioning well without the drug.

Benzodiazepine Withdrawal

Meth imitates the way the chemicals in the brain fabricate and send messages of gratification to the brain's delight center. Thus, an private can become addicted to it practically immediately after his first use. As meth produces a sense of instant gratification, it then becomes harder for life's normal pleasures to generate the same sense of gratification.

Meth addiction has spread to all areas of the United States. In 1999, more than 9.4 million habitancy reported trying meth at least once in their lifetime. The highest rate of meth use was among adults, ages 18 to 25, and nowhere is it a bigger qoute than in the Midwest, where it accounts for nearly 90 percent of all drug cases.

A meth user can be identified in any ways. He may contact psychological and behavioral symptoms like agitation, excited speech, decreased appetite, increased corporeal action levels, and occasional episodes of sudden and violent behavior, intense paranoia, optical and auditory hallucinations, and bouts of insomnia. He may also exhibit a tendency to compulsively clean and groom and repetitively sort and disassemble objects, such as cars and other mechanical devices.

The following are some common signs of meth addiction:
- flushed or tense appearance
- dilated pupils
- bloodshot eyes
- rotting teeth
- scars and open sores
- increased heart rate, blood pressure, and respiration
- a chemical odor on their breath
- rapid speech
- excessive sweating
- inability to sleep or eat
- severe weight loss
- paranoia
- hallucinations (often auditory)
- repetitive behavior
- memory loss
- depression
- psychosis
- teeth grist
- restlessness
- tremors

Moreover, meth addiction exposes a user at an increased risk for a wide range of other illnesses that can be brought on by the addict's poor living and condition habits and by the toxic effects of the drug.

Symptoms of Meth Addiction