4 minutes, 17 seconds
-388 Views 0 Comments 0 Likes 0 Reviews
Etizolam: What Is It?
The illicit product etizolam is a member of the "thienodiazepine" drug subclass, which shares chemical properties with benzodiazepines. Both substances are central nervous system (CNS) depressants, which means that they lessen the brain's excitability. Etizolam and benzodiazepines can aid with sleeplessness and muscular relaxation when used in short doses to alleviate anxiety and panic. High doses are taken when etizolam is used recreationally (typically in the form of etizolam liquid or etizolam pills), which causes altered brain chemistry and signaling and may lead to dependence or addiction. Etizolam can also have fatal effects when used with other CNS depressants, such as alcohol.
Is etizolam permitted in the US?
Many people find the legal position of etizolam in the US to be somewhat puzzling because, while not being accepted as a prescription drug by the FDA, it continues to be unclassified (in other words, it is not "scheduled" by the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA). This means that etizolam is not a controlled substance under the Controlled Substances Act because the DEA has not established the drug's potential for abuse or determined its therapeutic value. Etizolam can now be lawfully acquired as a "research chemical" as a result.
What Is the Use of Etizolam?
Buy Etizolam online UK is a prescription drug (in Japan, India, and Italy). It is frequently used to treat panic and generalized anxiety disorders. Contrary to benzodiazepines, it has also been used to treat insomnia, and it might be helpful for those who have generalized anxiety disorders coupled with depressive symptoms. Etizolam may also be used for other legitimate medical purposes, such as reducing bronchoconstriction in emphysema and asthma and minimizing bleeding following neurosurgery.
For the calm euphoria they produce, heavy doses of etizolam are used recreationally. Etizolam provides users the impression that "everything [is] going to be OK," much like benzodiazepines do. Users frequently mention feeling as though they are floating. Unfortunately, these emotions encourage new users to keep using etizolam, which eventually results in tolerance, dependence, and addiction.
Dosage
Etizolam is typically used orally daily at a dosage of between 0.5 mg and 2 mg in nations where it is a prescription medication. Etizolam is up to ten times more potent than diazepam (a benzodiazepine), according to some sources, while studies to better understand its pharmacology and pharmacokinetics in humans are still being conducted. Data on the toxicity of etizolam in comparison to diazepam, however, are contradictory. Rarely, those who abuse etizolam may administer it intravenously, as a rectal suppository, or by inhalation.
More significantly, an overdose of etizolam can be lethal. Etizolam is a CNS depressive that is frequently used with other CNS depressants, such as alcohol or opioids. Combining CNS depressants significantly increases the risk of overdosing.
Unconsciousness, respiratory depression, a very slow heartbeat, arrhythmia, coma, and death are among the symptoms of overdoses. Although the medicine flumazenil competitively binds to the same location where etizolam and benzodiazepines bind (specifically, GABA receptors in the brain), it can help reverse the etizolam symptoms overdose. However, there is presently no clinically validated treatment for etizolam overdose.