Intravenous drug use (recreational)


History

IV drug use is a relatively recent phenomenon arising from the invention of re-usable syringes and the synthesis of chemically pure morphine and cocaine.

It was noted that administering drugs intravenously strengthened their effect and since such drugs as heroin and cocaine were already being used to treat a wide variety of ailments, many patients were given injections of 'hard drugs' for such ailments as alcoholism and depression.

By the time of Aleister Crowley intravenous drug culture already had a small, but loyal following. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle writes that Sherlock Holmes used to inject cocaine to occupy his mind between cases.

Advantages

There are a variety of reasons why drugs would be injected rather than taken through other methods.

Disadvantages

In addition to general problems associated with IV drug use (see Intravenous therapy#Risks of intravenous therapy) there are some specific problems associated with the informal injection of drugs by non-professionals.

Preparation

The drug, usually in a powder or crystal form, is dissolved in water, normally in a spoon. Users draw the required amount of water into a syringe and squirt this over the drugs. The solution is then mixed and heated from below if necessary. (Heating is used mainly with heroin, but is also used when pharmaceutical drugs such Oxycontin or Dilaudid are injected to better separate the drug from the waxy filler; amphetamines lose potency when heated and cocaine dissolves quite easily.) Once the drugs are dissolved a small syringe, usually .5 or 1 cc, is used to draw the solution through a filter, usually cotton from a cigarette filter or cotton swab (cotton bud). The normal injection site is the back of the elbow on the user's non-writing hand. Sometimes, especially with long-term users, the blood flow to the injection site needs to be restricted, such as with a belt, so that the vein is visible.

See also