| What
are hallucinogens ? |
Hallucinogens
are a group of drugs that work on the brain to affect the senses
and cause hallucinations – seeing, hearing, smelling,
tasting or touching things that do not exist. Hallucinogens
are sometimes called psychedelic drugs, trips, magic mushrooms,
LSD or acid.
|
| Forms
of hallucinogens |
| Some
hallucinogens occur naturally in trees, vines, seeds, fungi (eg
psilocybin or magic mushrooms) and leaves. Others are made in
laboratories by mixing different chemical substances (trips,
LSD, acid). Some drugs, such as cannabis and ecstasy, can cause
hallucinogen-like effects when used in high doses or in certain
ways. Using hallucinogens is often called tripping. |
| Lysergic
acid diethylamide LSD |
LSD
(acid, trips) is the most often used form of hallucinogen. In
its pure form LSD is a white, odourless powder. This pure form
is very strong, so LSD is usually mixed with other things to
make the dose large enough to take. It comes in liquid form,
tablets, capsules or squares of gelatine or blotting paper.

|
| Psilocybin |
Psilocybin
(magic mushrooms) is the hallucinogenic chemical that occurs
in some mushrooms. In its pure form, psilocybin is also a white
powder, but it is usually sold as dried mushrooms or in substances
made from mushrooms. Psilocybin is from the same chemical family
as LSD so its effects are similar. Some people eat poisonous
mushrooms thinking they are mushrooms containing psilocybin.
This can be very dangerous as some poisonous mushrooms can cause
death or permanent liver damage.

|
|
| Effects
of hallucinogens |
What hallucinogens do to you
depends on:
• how much you take
• your height and weight
• your general health
• your mood
• your past experience with hallucinogens
• whether you use hallucinogens on their own or with other drugs
• whether you use alone or with others, at home or at a party, etc.
The effects of hallucinogens are not easy to predict. The effects
are different for different people and at different times.
The main effects of hallucinogens are changes in the way you
perceive things with your senses. They can include strange sensations
such as floating or your body becoming part of another object.
Some people find such unusual sensations interesting and pleasant,
while to others these same effects are unpleasant and disturbing. |
| Immediate
effects |
The
effects of hallucinogens begin within half an hour of taking
the drug, are strongest in three to five hours, and last for
up to 12 hours.
They can include:
•
seeing, hearing, touching or smelling things in a distorted way,
or that don’t exist (you usually know that what you are sensing is
not real)
•
intense sensory experiences (eg colours become very bright, sounds
become sharper)
•
mixing of the senses (eg you hear colours or see sounds)
•
changed sense of time (eg minutes can seem as slow as hours, or
you can re-live something that happened a long time ago)
•
space becomes distorted
•
strange bodily sensations (eg as though you are floating or being
pulled down by gravity, or that you are becoming part of another
object)
•
changed and intense thoughts
•
emotional swings (eg change from intense happiness to deep sadness).
Effects on your body may include things like:
•
your muscles twitch
•
you feel weak
•
you feel numb
•
your pupils get bigger
•
you shake
•
you feel sick or vomit
•
your heart beats faster
•
your blood pressure rises
•
you breathe faster and deeper than normal
•
your coordination is poor. |
| Bad
trips |
Sometimes
the effects of hallucinogens are mostly negative. This is called
a bad trip and it is common among first time users. Effects
of a bad trip can include:
•
extreme anxiety or fear
•
frightening hallucinations (eg spiders crawling on the skin)
•
panic, leading to taking risks (eg running across a busy street)
•
feelings of losing control or going mad
•
paranoia (feeling that other people want to harm you)
•
suicide or violence (rare).
If someone you know is having a bad trip, they need to be reassured
and comforted until the effects of the drug wear off. This can
take many hours and may not disappear altogether for some days.
|
| Long
term effects |
There
are few known long term effects from hallucinogens. However,
flashbacks – times when you feel the effects of the drug
again – can happen days, weeks or even years after taking
the drug. Flashbacks can include visual hallucinations and
other effects. They can happen without warning, last for a
minute or two and can be disturbing. Flashbacks may be triggered
by using other drugs or by stress, tiredness or physical exercise.
Regular users are more likely to experience flashbacks than
people who only use the drug from time to time. Some other
long term effects of hallucinogens may be damaged memory and
concentration. Using hallucinogens may increase the risk of mental
problems in some people. |
| Hallucinogens
and pregnancy |
LSD
may be related to an increased risk of miscarriage, but little
is known about the effects of LSD in pregnancy. However, most
drugs have some effect on the unborn baby if the mother
uses them while pregnant. |
| Tolerance
and dependence |
Anyone
can develop a tolerance to hallucinogens. Tolerance means that
you must take more of the drug to feel the same effects you used
to have with smaller amounts. With hallucinogens this happens
very quickly. Being tolerant to one kind of hallucinogen (eg
LSD) can also make you tolerant to other kinds (eg magic mushrooms).
Tolerance goes away when you stop using the drug regularly. Dependence
means that a drug takes up a lot of your thoughts, emotions and
activities.
Withdrawal means that if you stop or greatly reduce your intake
of the drug, you will experience uncomfortable physical and mental
signs. There is little evidence that dependence or withdrawal syndromes
exist for hallucinogens. |
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