Quick info
"Poppers" is a collective term for different alkyl nitrites, which are used in medicine to treat angina pectoris. Due to their aphrodisiac and analgesic effects, they are also consumed as intoxicants.
Muscle relaxation, drop in blood pressure, increase in heart rate, feeling of warmth or heat, short-term insensitivity to pain, euphoria and intensification of orgasm.
Onset of action:
After a few seconds.
Duration of action:
approx. 3 - 5 min.
Headache, dizziness, palpitations, loss of consciousness, fainting and circulatory collapse due to severe drop in blood pressure.
Long-term risks:
With regular use, permanent impairment of attention and memory as well as reduction of reaction time, cardiac arrhythmia as well as liver and kidney dysfunction, nerve and brain damage.
Do not consume poppers alone.
Do not add more right away (danger of circulatory collapse!).
Refrain from mixed consumption of any kind, especially with alcohol.
Follow the safer sex rules. Do not combine poppers with Viagra (risk of heart failure. Danger to life!).
People with respiratory and cardiovascular diseases, epileptics and pregnant women should not consume poppers.
Do not swallow! Drinking poppers can lead to a severe overdose, which can result in a fatal oxygen deficiency (methaemoglobinaemia) - contact poison control!
Poppers are irritating on contact with eyes and mucous membranes. Rinse immediately with plenty of water and seek medical attention!
Caution: Eye damage! Avoid poppers with the active ingredient (iso)propyl nitrite, it is suspected of causing partly irreversible visual disturbances. The active ingredient amyl nitrite does not seem to cause such damage. Some online shops now list the composition.
Increased risk behaviour due to pain-inhibiting, sexually stimulating, aphrodisiac and euphoric effects.
LSD analogues are substances that are chemically very similar to LSD and can have comparable effects. Some of them have been known for a long time (e.g. ALD52, ETH-LAD, AL-LAD, PRO-LAD etc.) and have been studied pharmacologically as well as psychopharmacologically, at least in part. Others are newer "creations" (e.g. the derivatives 1P-LSD,1B-LSD, 1cP-LSD, 1V-LSDetc.), for which only few or no data are available. Certain LSD analogues can (still) be legally produced, traded and consumed in some countries, which is the main reason for their distribution.
Most LSD analogues are naturally different from LSD in their effect and/or potency (e.g. ETH-LAD, AL-LAD, LSZ etc.). In contrast, the so-called 1-acylated LSD compounds (e.g. 1P-LSD, 1V-LSD, 1B-LSD, ALD-52, etc.) are presumed, on the basis of pharmacological studies, to convert into LSD in the body (they function as so-called prodrugs) and thus have a comparable psychoactive effect to LSD.
In the case of prodrugs of LSD and LSD analogues, it has not been conclusively clarified whether, in addition to their psychoactive effect, they can produce other pharmacological effects. How potent these prodrugs are compared to the resulting substance (e.g., 1P-LSD to LSD), and to what extent a delay in onset of action occurs in each case, may be substance-dependent and cannot be generalized. Therefore, it is important to approach the dose/effect carefully to avoid overdoses.
If you or someone else needs urgent help after taking drugs or alcohol, call an ambulance on 144. Tell the emergency responders everything you know.
It could save lives.