COMMON INHALANTS
Hair spray. Gasoline. Spray paint. Glue. Typewriter correction fluid. You
probably have at least one of these products in your home. These are just a few
of the inhalants that are poisonous when children:
· Sniff or inhale them directly from the cans, bottles,
or other containers they are in.
· Spray them into a bag, empty soft drink can, or other
container and breathe them in. (Gases like nitrous oxide are often inhaled from
balloons.)
· Spray or pour them onto a cloth or piece of clothing
and inhale deeply from the fabric.
Generally, inhalants fall into three categories: solvents, gases, and
nitrites.
Solvents are usually liquid. They are found in household and industrial
products, such as glues, paints, and polishes.
Gases are found in many household and commercial products.
Aerosol sprays like hair spray and spray paint, as well as medical gases
like nitrous oxide, fall into this category. Almost all pressurized aerosol
sprays can be abused.
Nitrites are found in room deodorizers.
Here is a list of only a few of the common household products that are
dangerous when inhaled:
· Kitchen Cooking spray Typewriter
correction fluid Disinfectants Fabric protectors Felt-tip
markers Furniture polish and wax Oven cleaners
· Bathroom Air fresheners Spray
deodorants Hair sprays Nail polish removers
· Garage/Workshop Pressurized aerosol
sprays Butane Gasoline Glues and adhesives Paints and paint
thinners Refrigerants (freon) Rust removers Spray paints
Keep this list in mind when you consider what products in your home have the
potential to be misused.
Inhalant abuse can be deadly and no one can predict how much of an inhalant
will kill. A young person can use a certain amount one time and seem fine, but
his or her next use could be fatal.
The Texas Commission on Drugs and Alcohol Abuse reports the following ways
that inhalants can kill:
· Asphyxia - Solvent gases can cause a person to stop
breathing from a lack of oxygen.
· Choking - Users can choke on their own vomit.
· Suffocation - This is more common among users who
inhale from plastic bags.
· Injuries - Inhalants can cause people to become
careless or aggressive. This often leads to behaviors that can injure or kill,
such as operating a motor vehicle dangerously or jumping from great heights.
Teens also can get burned or even be killed if someone lights a cigarette while
they are huffing butane, gasoline, or some other flammable substance.
· Suicides - Coming down from an inhalant high causes
some people to feel depressed, which may lead them to take their own lives.
· Cardiac arrest - Chemicals from inhalants can make the
heart beat very fast and irregularly, then suddenly stop breathing. This is
called cardiac arrest. One reason why this might happen is that inhalants
somehow make the heart extra-sensitive to adrenaline. (Adrenaline is a hormone
that the body produces, usually in response to fear, excitement, or surprise.) A
sudden rush of adrenaline combined with inhalants can make the heart stop
instantly. This "Sudden Sniffing Death," as it is called, is responsible for
more than half of all deaths due to inhalant abuse.
Another very real danger of inhalants is that they often lead young people to
try other drugs whose effects are even more intense and last
longer.
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