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Urban legends about drugs

Many urban legends and misconceptions about drugs have been created and circulated among young people and the general public, with varying degrees of veracity. These are commonly repeated by organizations which oppose all classified drug use, often causing the true effects and dangers of drugs to be misunderstood and less scrutinized. The most common subjects of such false beliefs are LSD, cannabis, and MDMA. These misconceptions include misinformation about adulterants or other black market issues, as well as alleged effects of the pure substances.

Lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) edit

Some of the strangest urban legends told are those about lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), a potent psychedelic drug that gained popularity in several countries in the 1960s and 1970s, and experienced a resurgence in the mid-2010s to present. The drug's relation to the 1960s counterculture was likely part of the reason for such legends.

Babysitter places baby in the oven while high on LSD edit

This is an unverifiable drug-scare story dating to the 1960s of a hippie babysitter girl putting a baby in the oven and a turkey in the bassinet. It has been debunked[1] by Snopes.com. This myth is parodied in The Simpsons episode "The Secret War of Lisa Simpson",[2] in which the children go on a school field trip to a "scared straight" wax museum at the local police station. One exhibit contains a wax dummy of a hippie woman eating a sandwich with a baby in it. Chief Wiggum says "That's right, she's got the munchies for a California Cheeseburger!"

In May 2009, partial ostension of this legend may have occurred when an Ohio man high on PCP allegedly tried to put his 28-day-old son into a conventional oven, only to be stopped in time by the child's mother.[3] Also, in March 2010, a Kentucky man put his five-week-old baby in an oven (without turning it on, and without any injury) while drunk and high on marijuana (that he had smoked earlier that night) that he alleged made him feel strange and suspected of being laced with a different drug that made him hallucinate; he was also tired from working.[4] In 2005 China Arnold murdered her near month-old baby with a microwave oven, but she claimed to be under the influence of alcohol, not LSD.[5][6]

There are a limited number of cases reported in which babies were put into microwaves, though these cases were not known to involve any drugs.[7][8] These were often cases of deliberate infanticide. However, there have been no known cases of microwaving (or baking) babies involving LSD specifically, or any other psychedelic drug, including cannabis. There are, however, many reported cases of psychotic violence under the influence of PCP (see below). PCP a dissociative anesthetic, is unrelated to LSD, a psychedelic drug.

Bad acid edit

A "bad trip" is easily caused by an expectation or fear of ill effects, which may later be blamed on "bad acid". This legend was made famous at the 1969 Woodstock festival, when concert-goers were warned to stay away from "the brown acid", which was allegedly bad.[9]

One possible reason people believe that they had "bad acid" could be because they were simply sold a much higher dose than usual, which is not uncommon due to the inherent lack of quality control of illicit drugs, and with LSD in particular being effective at microgram rather than milligram doses. The stronger the dose, the stronger and potentially more anxiety-provoking the trip can get.

However, drugs sometimes falsely represented by sellers as LSD in the 1970s were actually PCP, amphetamine, or other drugs that have quite different, and often unfavorable, effects from LSD, causing unwitting users to incorrectly attribute a "bad trip" to LSD. There are now many research chemicals (DOB[10][11] 2C-I,[12] DOC,[13] DOI,[14] etc.) that can be nearly indistinguishable from real LSD before use, and thus can be easily confused with "bad acid". Some of these, such as 25I-NBOMe are even potent enough for psychoactive doses to fit on blotter paper, and may occasionally be sold as LSD when the latter is scarce. The idea of adulterating blotter LSD with these chemicals, however, has no known basis in fact.[citation needed]

"Bananadine" LSD edit

The false claim states that it is possible to synthesize LSD or some similar hallucinogenic drug called "bananadine" from banana peels or other common household foods and chemicals. The actual synthesis of LSD usually requires advanced knowledge and experience in organic chemistry and requires both expensive laboratory equipment and expensive, carefully controlled precursor chemicals.

Originating from a recipe originally published as a hoax in the Berkeley Barb in March 1967,[15] variants of this legend often circulate on the Internet and were popular on BBSs well before the widespread availability of Internet access through William Powell's The Anarchist Cookbook. This book claimed "Musa sapientum Bananadine" was a mild psychoactive drug found in banana peels. The slang terms "mellow yellow" and "saffron" (for the color of the peels) were borrowed from the 1966 Donovan song, "Mellow Yellow", perhaps because the phrase "electrical banana" is mentioned in one of the lines. According to The Rolling Stone Illustrated Encyclopedia of Rock and Roll, Donovan claimed he was actually referring to a banana-shaped vibrator.[16][failed verification]

Blue star tattoos edit

This legend frequently surfaces in American elementary and middle schools in the form of a flyer that has been photocopied through many generations, which is distributed to parents by concerned school officials. It has also become popular on Internet mailing lists and websites. This legend states that a temporary lick-and-stick tattoo soaked in LSD and made in the form of a blue star, or of popular children's cartoon characters, is being distributed to children in the area in order to get them addicted to LSD. The flyer lists an inaccurate description of the effects of LSD, some attribution (typically to a well-regarded hospital or a vaguely specified "adviser to the president"), and instructs parents to contact police if they come across the blue star tattoos. No actual cases of LSD distribution to children in this manner have ever been documented. LSD is not addictive, and it is unlikely to be abused by an unwitting user. Therefore, there is no plausible motivation for a drug dealer to distribute LSD in this manner.[17]

Legally insane edit

There is an urban legend that a person who has used LSD more than seven times is automatically declared legally insane. The same claim is often suggested with large doses, the difference being that the person is considered psychotic only for the duration of the trip. An extension of this legend is that a person who does LSD more than "X number of times" is permanently disqualified from the military as a result of being "legally insane", a version which was likely inspired by wishful thinking of drug-using draft dodgers in the 1960s. But no such law exists, at least not in the United States.[18] However, the United States Air Force has regulations limiting and prohibiting recruitment of pre-service drug users, including prohibition of proven or admitted LSD users.[19]

A version of this legend was repeated as fact on TV's Dragnet series in 1967, in an episode revolving around the use of LSD before it was made illegal. The script described a shipment containing "one pound of LSD [tabs], enough to turn the entire population of Los Angeles into dangerous psychotics" on the premise that one dose made a person legally insane due to the recurrence of completely unpredictable flashbacks throughout the user's life after a single dose.

LSD causes genetic mutations edit

Beginning in 1967, studies raised concerns that LSD might produce genetic damage[20] or developmental abnormalities in fetuses. However, these initial reports were based on in vitro studies or were poorly controlled and have not been substantiated. In studies of chromosomal changes in human users and in monkeys, the balance of evidence suggests no increase in chromosomal damage. For example, white blood cells of people who had been given LSD in a clinical setting were examined for visible chromosomal abnormalities; overall, there appeared to be no lasting changes.[20] Several studies have been conducted using illicit LSD users and provide a less clear picture. Interpretation of this data is generally complicated by factors such as the unknown chemical composition of street LSD, concurrent use of other psychoactive drugs, and diseases such as hepatitis in the sampled populations. It seems possible that the small number of genetic abnormalities reported in users of street LSD is either coincidental or related to factors other than a toxic effect of pure LSD.[20] A 2008 medical review concluded, "The available data suggest that pure LSD does not cause chromosomal abnormalities, spontaneous abortions, or congenital malformations."[21] Another large study, published in 2022, found no evidence to support the urban myth.[22] However, this refutation has not stopped this perennial legend from being told, nor has it stopped the jokes about such "mutations" allegedly messing up the children of the Baby Boomers.

Man permanently thinks he is an orange and is terrified of being turned into a glass of orange juice edit

Another common legend, again dating back to the 1960s, was that a man who took LSD went insane and permanently thought that he was a glass of orange juice. Because of this, he could never bend over, slept upright and did not make any sudden movements over fear of being "spilt". Alternative versions sometimes have the man thinking he is a glass of milk or a whole orange. Another version of this myth states that the man believed he had become an orange, and was afraid he would be 'peeled' by his friends.[23]

Police officer unwittingly drinks LSD edit

In this legend, which dates back to 1970, a police (or customs) officer pulls over a driver believed to have been drinking, sees that the driver has a water bottle, and demands a taste of it to see if it contains alcohol. The officer does not taste any alcohol, so the driver either gets off completely or merely gets a speeding ticket. Shortly afterward, the officer begins tripping very hard and stares into space, since the swig of "water" he took actually contained numerous "hits" of LSD. In some versions of the legend, the officer consumes enough LSD to actually go insane. According to Snopes.com, there are no verifiable reports of this ever happening, even decades after the legend was first told, and it is thus considered spurious.[24]

"Permatripping" and retention of LSD in spinal fluid edit

This legend may have its foundation in the fact that chronic use can result in flashbacks and hallucinogen persisting perception disorder (HPPD).[25] There remains no consensus regarding the nature and causes of HPPD or flashbacks. A study of 44 HPPD subjects who had previously ingested LSD showed EEG abnormalities.[26]

Given that some symptoms have environmental triggers, it may represent a failure to adjust visual processing to changing environmental conditions. There are no explanations for why only some individuals develop HPPD. Those affected by HPPD are not psychotic, as they clearly recognize the unrealistic nature of their visual disturbances.[27] Explanations in terms of LSD physically remaining in the body for months or years after consumption have been discounted by experimental evidence.[citation needed]

LSD is metabolized by the liver, and has an elimination half-life of around 2.5 to 4 hours.[28]

Strychnine edit

Anti-drug educators frequently tell their students some variant on the theme of inevitable strychnine poisoning through LSD use, for example, that strychnine is commonly sold as a cheaper substitute for LSD by unscrupulous drug dealers; that strychnine is a byproduct of LSD synthesis; that the body produces strychnine as a result of LSD metabolism; or that strychnine is used as a preservative to prevent the otherwise natural, rapid decomposition of LSD, allowing it to be stored; or that strychnine is somehow necessary to bond LSD to blotter paper. None of this is true.[29] These claims may even be believed and propagated by drug users themselves. In reality, most hallucinogens cause some degree of mental or physical discomfort after the "trip" is over. This is an indirect effect of the drug,[29] not strychnine or any other adulterant. Additionally, strychnine is one of the most bitter substances known, with a detection threshold of 1 part per million, well below toxic levels.[29] Finally, the dangerous dose of strychnine is too high to be contained in a blotter square.[29]

Strychnine has indeed rarely been discovered mixed with LSD and other drugs in a few samples recovered by law enforcement agencies, but these were all found in murder or attempted murder investigations where someone was being specifically targeted for poisoning, and not associated with recreational LSD use.[29]

A related myth is that a new type of gang initiation requires the initiate to put a mixture of LSD and strychnine on the buttons of as many payphones as possible. This too is debunked by the urban legends website Snopes.com.[30]

Sungazing while tripping edit

A popular legend dating back to the 1960s, it has been claimed that several people took LSD and stared at the sun, going blind as a result. This myth appeared in 1967 on the cop show Dragnet, and twice in the mainstream news media. The legend is considered to be unfounded, since in 1968 the source of the hoax, Norman M. Yoder, commissioner of the Office of the Blind in the Pennsylvania State Welfare Department, admitted that he had completely made up the story because of his "concern over illegal LSD use by children".[31] After the sun-gazing on LSD story was widely publicized, a small number of case reports were published in the medical literature which describe this phenomenon temporarily occurring.[32][33] In one case, the patient was a teenage girl described as having a "hysterical personality" who heard warnings about staring at the sun under LSD in a school anti-drug lecture and thought this "would be a neat thing", and in another case the patient had paranoid schizophrenia.[32]

Cannabis edit

Many misleading urban legends about cannabis exist. Like LSD rumors, many were spread during the 1960s and 1970s, and are believed to continuously circulate today. These widespread legends claim that it is easy to overdose on the smokeable variant of cannabis and that it is extremely dangerous and addictive when compared to alcohol and tobacco.

Withdrawal from heavy, chronic cannabis use does not usually exceed 3–4 days, but it has the potential to be psychologically addictive.[34][35][36][37] Withdrawal symptoms are generally mild—loss of appetite, insomnia, feelings of uneasiness/anxiety, irritability, craving,[38] tension, stomach ache,[39] and headache[40] all being common symptoms. There are studies that show no actual increased risk of cancer from smoking marijuana, even when duration of use is expanded over several years.[41] In fact, some studies indicate THC to have anticancer properties, with studies showing tumor reduction in mice.[42]

Confusion with Jimson weed edit

Historically, and possibly related to the "Reefer Madness" legend, some people (particularly Americans) had confused cannabis with Jimson weed (Datura stramonium). Jimson weed, which grows wild in the United States and several other countries, is a potent deliriant which can cause true hallucinations and delusions that are believed by the user to be real, as opposed to the pseudohallucinations and perceptual distortions typically caused by cannabis.[43] Confusion could have resulted from the fact that Datura's common name contains the word "weed", which is also a slang term for cannabis, and the fact that both plants (as well as others) have been given the moniker "locoweed" in the first half of the 20th century. Aside from these superficial similarities, the two plants are not related, do not resemble one another, and are very unlikely to be confused. Jimson weed is highly toxic and can cause delirium, confusion, hallucinations, blurred vision, photophobia, dry mouth, urinary retention, hyperthermia, incoordination, hypertension, and rapid heartbeat among other effects. An overdose (or suspected overdose) on this substance is considered a medical emergency, as it can cause seizures, coma, or death by cardiac arrest—all parts of Datura plants contain dangerous levels of the tropane alkaloids, specifically atropine, hyoscyamine, and scopolamine, which are classified as deliriants and/or anticholinergics.[44][45]

"Flashbacks" due to release from fat cells edit

Similar to one of the most enduring myths about LSD, and also somewhat related to the "multi-day impairment" legend described further down on this list, this legend claims that residual THC stored in fat cells gets released spontaneously into the bloodstream in enough quantities to get one high again long after the last use of cannabis, be it days, weeks, or even months later.[46] This legend is typically accompanied by anecdotal evidence of people who experience a "high" after doing exercise of some sort. While somewhat more biologically plausible than the discredited LSD legend due to the fat-solubility of THC, this phenomenon remains scientifically unproven. A 2009 study of rats that involved injecting them with large quantities of THC (equivalent to 5–10 joints per day in humans) each day for ten days straight, then subjecting them to simulated severe stress or food deprivation led to double the blood levels of THC−COOH two days after the last THC exposure compared to rats that were neither stressed nor deprived of food.[47] If such results occurred in humans, then it is theoretically possible for a chronic cannabis user to fail a drug test long after the usual detection time due to exercise, dieting, or severe stress shortly before the test—and several anecdotal reports of this exist. However, there is currently no hard evidence that enough active THC would be released to get one "high" or cause "flashbacks". One should also note that flashbacks from psychoactive drugs in general are now known to be psychological phenomena,[by whom?] and drug residues typically play no significant role in their occurrence and recurrence.

As for the anecdotes about exercise, they likely experienced a "runner's high" due to their bodies releasing endorphins, which are endogenous opioid agonists, along with anandamide and other endogenous cannabinoid agonists.[48] These flashbacks have also been reported after one has stretched or stood up/sat or lay down abruptly.[49] In addition, some studies find that the body produces endocannabinoids such as anandamide during exercise, which may also explain such effects since they activate the same receptors as THC.[50][51]

George Washington smoked cannabis edit

There is a common belief that George Washington (and/or other Founding Fathers such as Thomas Jefferson) used cannabis for its psychoactive or medicinal properties.[52][53] This has even made its way into popular films such as Dazed and Confused.

Both Washington and Jefferson grew cannabis to produce hemp, and Washington used hemp fiber to make clothes for his slaves, but there is no direct evidence that either Washington or Jefferson consumed it for its psychoactive properties.[53] Washington is commonly mis-quoted as saying "Make the most of the Indian hemp seed, and sow it everywhere," often cited as a note to his gardener published in The Washington Papers.[54] However the closest phrase to this in The Washington Papers is in a letter to William Pearce – "I am very glad to hear that the Gardener has saved so much of the St. foin seed, and that of the India Hemp. Make the most you can of both, by sowing them again in drills. [...] The Hemp may be sown any where."[55]

In The Papers of George Washington, "hemp" is defined as Cannabis sativa grown for fiber,[56] and "Indian hemp" typically refers to the closely related Cannabis indica.[57] While Washington was growing cannabis for its fiber, both of these species are also cultivated for their psychoactive and medicinal properties.

When cannabis is grown for its medicinal or psychoactive properties, male plants are routinely separated from females to prevent pollination, as non-pollinated female plants produce the most potent and prized flowering tops,[58] known as sinsemilla (from the Spanish "sin semilla", meaning "without seed").[58] To produce sinsemilla, the sexes must be separated before pollination occurs.[58] On August 7, 1765, Washington wrote in his diary "Began to separate the Male from the Female hemp at Do.– rather too late."[56] While this has been taken as evidence that Washington was growing cannabis for its psychoactive or medicinal properties, The Straight Dope points out that later entries in Washington's diary suggest that "he divided the plants because the males made stronger fiber while the female plants produced the seed needed for the next year's crop."[53] Two days after he wrote the aforementioned entry in his diary, Washington wrote that he had "put some Hemp in the Rivr. to Rot,"[56] a technique called water retting used for producing hemp, not psychoactive cannabis.[53] The following month he wrote that he "Began to Pull the Seed Hemp but it was not sufficiently ripe," and three weeks later that the "Hempseed seems to be in good order for getting – that is of a proper ripeness."[56]

The introductory editorial for the June 2010 cannabinoid-themed issue of the British Journal of Pharmacology said that "there are sources that suggest that chronic tooth-ache may have led the first President of the United States, George Washington, to grow the plant for medicinal purposes,"[59] though these sources are not cited. The cover of the issue featured images of Washington and Queen Victoria placed on either side of a cannabis leaf.[59]

An allergic reaction to molecules found in marijuana killed Bruce Lee edit

A number of rumours surfaced surrounding the cause of action film star Bruce Lee's death in 1973, one of which was that he had been killed by the consumption of cannabis.[60] Lee died of a cerebral edema several hours after taking the painkiller and muscle relaxant equagesic.[60] His autopsy showed trace amounts of cannabis in his stomach, and he had been known to use cannabis.[60][61] However, a doctor at the coroner's hearing was quoted as saying that the cannabis in Lee's stomach was "no more significant than if Bruce had drunk a cup of tea that day."[60]

Lee's physician, Donald Langford, and Peter Wu, a doctor who had treated Lee for another edema ten weeks earlier, believed that the fatal edema could have been caused by a rare allergic reaction to an alkaloid in cannabis, as a large quantity of hashish was removed from his stomach during the earlier edema, and he had been warned not to use it again.[61][62] Wu told the coroner he believed the death was due to hypersensitivity to either cannabis or equagesic.[62] However, Ronald D. Teare, a professor of forensic medicine at the University of London who was flown in to be the chief expert in the coroner's report, said that it was both "irresponsible and irrational" to attribute either edema to cannabis, and concluded the fatal edema was due to a rare reaction to equagesic.[60][62] Teare, who had supervised nearly 100,000 autopsies and provided evidence for nearly 20,000 inquests in his 35 years of experience, was echoed by R. R. Lycette, the clinical pathologist at Queen Elizabeth Hospital.[62] Lycette told the hearing that his death could not have been caused by cannabis, and that Lee had died from an edema caused by a reaction to one or both of the ingredients in equagesic.[62]

At the time in Hong Kong, cannabis was seen in an extremely negative light—worse than opium—and was "considered a 'foreign' drug with sinister and evil undertones."[62] Bruce Thomas, author of Bruce Lee: Fighting Spirit stated that "this view had a massive impact on the official findings," and that Wu's inclusion of cannabis as a suspected cause of death "reflected this cultural and even political pressure."[62] Wu later said in a 1992 interview with Thomas:

Professor Teare was a forensic scientist recommended by Scotland Yard; he was brought in as the expert, so we can't contradict his testimony. The dosage of cannabis is neither precise nor predictable, but I've never known anyone to die simply from taking it.[62]

Although it could not be completely ruled out that cannabis caused the edema, Teare's view was accepted by the coroner, and the official verdict was "death by misadventure" caused by a reaction to equigesic.[60][62] Cannabis was not included as a possible cause of Lee's death.[62]

Reefer madness edit

Originating in the 1930s, this myth was the basis for films like Reefer Madness, and used by Harry Anslinger of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics as justification for outlawing cannabis. The allegation was that even the calmest, most normal person could be transformed into a psychopathic killer or rapist solely from smoking a joint. No relationship has ever been proven linking such crimes to the acute intoxication of cannabis alone, and cannabis' psychological effects tend to be more associated with pacifism and inactivity than with aggression. For example, studies of the Jamaican working class showed no difference in the crime rates between users and non-user of cannabis.[63]

Smoking or "chasing" cannabis with tobacco increases the high edit

In many places, cannabis is routinely mixed with tobacco when rolled into joints. In North America cannabis in any form is also often "chased" with a tobacco cigarette, and hollowed-out cigars filled with cannabis (blunts) are also popular in some subcultures. Some users say that smoking tobacco increases the cannabis high, and this is often attributed to either the nicotine or additives such as menthol. Until recently this was based solely on anecdotal evidence. There may be at least some truth to this legend, as a 2005 study found that a transdermal nicotine patch modestly enhanced the subjective "high" of cannabis relative to a placebo patch—but only in males. Females actually saw a slight reduction in subjective effects.[64] Reasons for the enhancement are not well understood, and this study appears to be the only one as of 2010 that found such effects. However, another study found a significant downside to the practice. It appears that tobacco, which is known to be highly addictive, also enhances the likelihood of developing cannabis dependence symptoms when the two substances are used concurrently.[65]

Some Lucky Strike cigarettes contained cannabis edit

It has been claimed the cigarette brand Lucky Strike is so named because every so often, a consumer of the product would have a "lucky strike", finding a cannabis spliff in a pack of cigarettes. The rumor varies in how often the cannabis cigarette would be included, anywhere from one in every thousand cartons to one in every pack. It is unclear when this myth originated; Snopes.com claims it has been floating around for "many years". Lucky Strike's slogan "It's Toasted" fueled belief in the myth further ('toasted' being one slang term for being high on cannabis). Despite the popularity of the myth, there are no reliable reports of any Lucky Strike cigarette containing cannabis. The name "Lucky Strike", in reality, is only a marketing ploy, implying to customers that obtaining their brand is a "Lucky Strike". The "It's Toasted" slogan refers to the product's tobacco being toasted instead of sun-dried, making a supposedly better-tasting product.[66]

Other urban legends offshoot from this one. One of the explanations for the origin of flipping a "lucky" cigarette upside down claims the practice originated from the Lucky Strike myth; it is presumed the superstition arose from flipping the marijuana-containing cigarette upside-down in order to save it for last.[66]

Popularity in the United States in the 1960s edit

Although the 1960s are commonly perceived as a time of rampant marijuana use compared with the present day, in a 1969 Gallup poll only 4% of American adults had tried marijuana and 34% did not know its effects.[67] In contrast, later Gallup polls show that the percentage of adults who had tried marijuana had risen to 33% by 1985 and 34% by 1999.[68]

MDMA (ecstasy) edit

The third most common illicit drug that is the source of urban legends is 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), better known as "ecstasy". In the United States, this substance was banned in 1985, and other countries followed suit as well. Among American youth, MDMA was most popular in the 1990s and early 2000s, peaking in 2001 and declining thereafter.[69] It was during this time of rather faddish use that numerous urban legends and misconceptions began to surface and be spread through the media, and not all of them necessarily originated from anti-drug organizations.

MDMA drains spinal fluid edit

This myth appears to be derived from research in 1994 (This myth was circulating in the UK as early as 1991) in which serotonin breakdown products were measured in the spinal fluid of ecstasy users. However, it was the researchers, not the drug, who drained the fluid (for the purpose of testing).[70] Nonetheless, this legend (and related ones about it damaging one's spinal cord and/or spinal column, which is also false) was popularized in 2000 by Eminem's songs "Drug Ballad" and "The Kids".[71]

"Stacks"—Single, double, triple etc. edit

Many ecstasy users describe the potency of various ecstasy pills in terms of their stack such as double stack or triple stack pills. These claims are dubious as there is no way to verify potency objectively without proper testing. The term "stack" is not intended to measure potency of ecstasy pills, but it is used as a measurement of mass. Single stacks weigh in at 0.20 grams, doubles at 0.40 grams, and triples at 0.60 grams. Furthermore, a high percentage of what is sold as "ecstasy" may contain a combination of MDMA and one or more other substances or may in fact contain no MDMA at all. For these reasons, the "stack" system of strength description is not necessarily trustworthy—as is commonly the case in the underground drug market.

Methamphetamine edit

Though initially there were not very many urban legends about methamphetamine ("crank", "crystal meth", "ice"), the "meth epidemic" of the late 1990s and early 2000s (especially in the USA) led to quite a few new legends.

Lung damage from recrystallization edit

One meth legend refers to the method of administration in which the user will heat/melt crystal methamphetamine and inhale the resulting methamphetamine vapor. The legend states that the drug, once inhaled, will re-crystallize in large amounts inside the lungs, damaging them in the process. This is a false claim as crystallized methamphetamine is always in the form of a salt (usually methamphetamine hydrochloride), which is highly soluble in water, as well as hydrophilic, and is instantly absorbed into the user's bloodstream via the alveoli.

However, intravenous methylphenidate (Ritalin) use results in a type of lung damage commonly known as Ritalin lung.[72] Methylphenidate tablets are crushed and dissolved into solution for IV injection. The tablets contain talc and other particulates which can deposit in the lung (talcosis) and result in severe emphysema affecting all the lobes of the lung.[73] The "Ritalin lung" effect could be a possible source of how rumors about methamphetamine damaging the lungs could have surfaced.

Strawberry Quik edit

Another meth legend is that dealers are selling colored and flavored meth resembling candy (often with names like Strawberry Quick, originating from an idea that dealers would mix the drug with strawberry-flavored Nesquik) to entice children to buy it. It was first reported in 2007 in the western United States, and children were allegedly ingesting it thinking it was candy, and ending up in the ER. According to Snopes.com there is no hard evidence, as of October 2008, that flavored meth is being handed out in schoolyards, nor that children are mistaking meth for candy.[74]

Heroin edit

Cotton fever edit

Cotton fever is a high fever supposedly caused by injecting cotton fibers into the bloodstream when shooting up heroin. Cotton is sometimes used as a crude filter for particulate matter prior to IV injection. Other commonly blamed substances include fiberglass if a cigarette filter was used (cigarette filters do not contain fiberglass), or dirt if Mexican heroin was injected.[75] In general, cotton fever refers to a fever that users believe is caused by inanimate particulate matter injected into the bloodstream. In reality, the particulate matter causing cotton fever is bacteria from lack of sterile technique. Most cases of cotton fever resolve as the body clears the infection. Users will often seek medical attention when cotton fever persists. Persistent cotton fever is often infective endocarditis. Although endotoxin shed by the bacteria Enterobacter agglomerans, which colonizes cotton plants, has been implicated as the cause of cotton fever,[76] most clinical cases demonstrate blood cultures positive for skin and fecal bacteria.

"Cheese" edit

"Cheese" or "Tylenol with Smack" is a heroin-based recreational drug that came to the attention of the media inside and outside the United States[77] after a string of deaths among adolescents in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex, between 2005 and 2007. It is generally reported to be a mixture of heroin and Tylenol PM (an OTC acetaminophen and diphenhydramine combination) or its generic equivalent, in varying ratios.

It seems likely that the concept was originally created as a joke, and after seizures of low purity heroin cut with paracetamol (acetaminophen) "validated" the claims, the DEA issued a warning.[78] Although the source of the original hoax is gone, newspapers and media outlets continue to make reference to each other with no mention of any primary sources, perpetuating the myth of cheese as "starter heroin" for children. However, there may have been some ostension of this legend in 2007 involving a few individuals in Texas.[79]

In the South Park episode "Major Boobage", which aired for the first time on 28 March 2008, 'cheesing' referred to a moral panic about children using cat urine to get high.

Phencyclidine (PCP) edit

Embalming fluid edit

A commonly held misconception is that phencyclidine (PCP, angel dust) is the same as (or is synthesized from) embalming fluid. Some people, believing this myth, have actually attempted to smoke cigarettes or cannabis dipped in real embalming fluid (i.e. formaldehyde), which is highly toxic. Conversely, some users of PCP-laced cannabis believe (and are often told) that it contains embalming fluid proper and not PCP, or that the slang term "dust" really means embalming fluid proper. Sometimes, the two substances are even mixed together, in a further ostension of this legend.[80][81] The combination might be called "fry", "wet", "illy", "sherm", "worm", "water-water", "amp", "dust(ed)", or other names.

Rodney King was on PCP at the time of his 1991 beating and arrest edit

The Rodney King police beating case in Los Angeles was a source of much controversy and outrage, as well as urban legends. Because King resisted arrest, with several officers needed to subdue him, he was assumed to be on PCP at the time due to its reputation for inciting violent and unpredictable behavior coupled with an inability to feel pain (often misinterpreted as "superhuman" strength). However, toxicology results show that the only drugs found in his system were alcohol and traces of marijuana.[82][83]

Man slices off his face and feeds it to dogs edit

One legend holds that a man who, while under the influence of the drug, thoroughly sliced off pieces of his own face, including his eyes, to feed to his pet dogs. Some versions of this tale say he suffered permanent brain damage as well. This legend is remarkably similar to what the character Mason Verger did in Thomas Harris' 1999 novel Hannibal. The legend, however, dates back earlier than 1999, and can be traced to former New York homicide detective Vernon J. Geberth, who writes about it in his book Practical Homicide Investigation. According to Geberth, this actually did occur to a man named Michael, and Geberth was one of the detectives called to the scene.[84] A 1989 book by Dr. Joseph Sacco[85] also mentions this story, albeit with a few differences in the details.

Superhuman strength edit

Some reports cite a widely held belief that PCP can give its users "superhuman" strength for the duration of its effects,[86] and there are several anecdotes alleging this phenomenon. However, it does not typically make the user significantly stronger in reality than they otherwise would be. The exception is when a user experiences excited delirium, a severe and life-threatening reaction that occasionally results from use of PCP as well as various stimulants such as cocaine and amphetamines. Excited delirium has also been reported to occur without any drug use, and the increased strength that results is most likely caused by a massive increase in adrenaline.[87]

Psilocybin mushrooms edit

Super Mario connection to psilocybin mushrooms edit

One legend that is popular among both the drug and video gaming subcultures is that the mushroom powerup in Super Mario games is actually based on psilocybin mushrooms. Somewhat lending credit to the legend, Shigeru Miyamoto, the creator of the Super Mario series, has stated that he chose mushrooms for their relationship to "magical realms", and has drawn connections to other works featuring mushrooms with mysterious powers, such as Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, a story in which eating specific mushrooms cause one to change size.[88] The mushrooms depicted in the game (white circles on red caps) also have a similar appearance to Amanita muscaria which, while being quite distinct from psilocybin mushrooms ("magic mushrooms"), still have hallucinogenic properties,[89] and have been used by humans for their intoxicating effects for hundreds of years.[90]

Designer drugs edit

The advent of novel illegal or quasi-legal designer drugs intended as substitutes or alternatives to illegal drugs has given rise to several new legends as well.

Cannibalism from "bath salts" edit

In 2012, novel substituted cathinones, nicknamed "bath salts" as a result of mephedrone originally being sold as bath salts in the US to evade consumer protection laws,[91] were implicated in several violent attacks, including some highly publicized cases of cannibalism.[92] However, the most well-known cannibal attacker from Miami, Rudy Eugene, tested negative for all drugs known to be nicknamed "bath salts" and every other known psychoactive substance except traces of cannabis.[93]

General edit

In addition to legends about specific drugs, there are also some more generic ones that are often applied to several types of drugs. Typically, these legends involve rather morbid themes and/or targeted children, but some are told with more levity for the purpose of humor.

Drugs smuggled in baby's corpse edit

This legend, dating back to the early 1970s and first appearing on the Internet in 1996, claims that drug traffickers are smuggling illegal drugs (typically cocaine) in hollowed-out dead babies to avoid detection.[94] Allegedly, tourists' babies are kidnapped, killed, cut open, filled with drugs, and sewn shut so the contraband can be more readily sneaked over the border. However, according to U.S. Customs and other law enforcement agencies, there are no verifiable reports of this ever happening, and thus this myth is unfounded.[95]

Drug-laced candy or lollipops given to schoolchildren edit

Plenty of lollipops in "hippy" stores sold in countries like the UK and Canada have been alleged to contain CBD, a non-intoxicating phytocannabinoid; age limits on these are unclear and they are sold passively.

This legend, which surfaced on the Internet just in time for Halloween in October 2004, claimed that drug dealers were giving lollipops laced with drugs, typically a combination of THC and PCP, to unsuspecting children and causing them great harm. Such suckers are allegedly referred to as "dro pops" or something to that effect, and various towns around the country have had their own versions of the legend.[96] According to the U.S. DEA, suckers containing THC and/or PCP were found and confiscated in Chicago in the spring of 2004. They also report that in 2003 and 2004 some psilocybin mushroom chocolate candies were seized near Amarillo, Texas,[97] and that hollowed-out lollipops filled with heroin have been seized in New York City.[98] The goal of doing so was likely to evade detection by law enforcement by disguising the drugs as candy. There is no evidence that these were ever given to children, much less that any such children were harmed, or even that such lollipops have been found outside of these specific locations or anywhere since early 2004.[96] Thus, this legend can be considered to be in a similar vein as the infamous blue star tattoo legend.

Drug-related Halloween legends edit

Related to the above legend, various drugs have also found their way into the more general and perennial Halloween poisoning legends. Allegedly, unsuspecting trick-or-treaters are given candy (or sometimes fruits) laced with poisons, needles, razor blades, and drugs by strangers. However, virtually all reports of this happening are now known to be either hoaxes, events unrelated to Halloween candy, or non-random poisonings by relatives made to look random.[99] The latest manifestation of drug-related Halloween legends was a prediction by Sheriff Lee Baca of Los Angeles that cannabis edibles (from medical marijuana dispensaries) would possibly end up in the hands of trick-or-treaters on Halloween in 2010. Baca even went so far as to confiscate cannabis edibles from circulation in an attempt to prevent this from happening, and displayed them on television two days before Halloween. Again, there is no evidence that cannabis-laced treats were ever given out to trick-or-treaters in 2010 or in any other year.[100][101]

"Gnome" legend edit

Another legend involves a group of teenagers who, while drunk and/or tripping on some sort of hallucinogen, find what they perceive to be a gnome (sometimes a dwarf, hobgoblin or smurf), capture it, and bring it home. They sleep off the drug's effects, and the next morning they find out that the "gnome" was really a lost (and very frightened) child. Though the story may be told by some tellers in a negative light, it may also have a positive spin in that the teens become unwitting heroes in finding a missing child whose parents (as well as the police) had been unable to find. According to Snopes.com, the legend had first surfaced in 2004, and as of 2020 the legend's truth status remains undetermined and unverifiable.[102] In some versions of a legend the "gnome" is not a child but a person with dwarfism or Down Syndrome; some have even gone as far to say it was a dead baby.

"Homeopathic" drug water edit

In 2004–2005, an Internet rumor was being spread that claimed that LSD (and other drugs) were being diluted with water to extremely low concentrations, which allegedly made the drugs more powerful, yet cheaper and undetectable.[103] This is related to the pseudo-scientific "Law of Infinitesimals", one of the principles behind homeopathy. However, there is no evidence that this actually has effects different from a placebo, or that a significant number of users or dealers were ever actually doing this.

Drug testing edit

The increasingly common practice of drug testing, especially urinalysis, has led to an increase in the number of drug users looking for ways to beat the tests, and has spawned a number of urban legends as a result. One should note that time is the only scientifically proven method for certainly passing a test, apart from not consuming any substances at all that are likely to be tested for. However, this does not stop users from getting creative in their attempts to somehow shorten the detection times and/or mask the contents of their fluid specimens, with varying degrees of success or lack thereof.

Secondhand exposure will cause a positive test edit

This legend is technically true but highly misleading. According to a U.S. Army study, the amount of secondhand cannabis smoke needed to cause a false positive result (failure) is quite large indeed, and would require being sealed in an unventilated car or small room filled with marijuana being actively smoked (often referred to as a "hotbox") for several hours. Hair testing, however, is a different matter, particularly with passive exposure to crack/cocaine, which can deposit onto hair and be readily incorporated into it. With regards to cannabis, however, typically only metabolites (produced by the body and thus not found in smoke) are tested rather than THC, so failure is unlikely to result from non-extreme passive exposure.[104][105]

High doses of niacin will help you pass edit

Niacin, also known as Vitamin B3, is speciously claimed by some to "burn it out" of one's system when taken at high doses (250–500 mg per day). While some Internet (and other) sources claim that this works wonders, there is no supporting scientific evidence.[106] Very high doses can also cause adverse side effects.[107]

This legend may have been (inadvertently) inspired by Narconon, a Scientology-based drug rehabilitation program that uses exercise, saunas, and dangerously high doses of niacin (and other vitamins) to detox. It is also part of L. Ron Hubbard's general Purification Rundown, which can supposedly remove pollutants as well as drug residues. Although some drug users claim that this has worked,[108] there are currently no peer-reviewed scientific studies to back these methods up.[109]

See also edit

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urban, legends, about, drugs, unintentionally, consumed, substances, adulterant, medicine, contamination, diluent, lacing, drugs, clandestine, chemistry, contamination, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page,. For unintentionally consumed substances see Adulterant Medicine contamination Diluent Lacing drugs and Clandestine chemistry Contamination This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Urban legends about drugs news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is Some sections may lack notability Please help improve this article if you can January 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes inline citations but they are not properly formatted Please improve this article by correcting them July 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Many urban legends and misconceptions about drugs have been created and circulated among young people and the general public with varying degrees of veracity These are commonly repeated by organizations which oppose all classified drug use often causing the true effects and dangers of drugs to be misunderstood and less scrutinized The most common subjects of such false beliefs are LSD cannabis and MDMA These misconceptions include misinformation about adulterants or other black market issues as well as alleged effects of the pure substances Contents 1 Lysergic acid diethylamide LSD 1 1 Babysitter places baby in the oven while high on LSD 1 2 Bad acid 1 3 Bananadine LSD 1 4 Blue star tattoos 1 5 Legally insane 1 6 LSD causes genetic mutations 1 7 Man permanently thinks he is an orange and is terrified of being turned into a glass of orange juice 1 8 Police officer unwittingly drinks LSD 1 9 Permatripping and retention of LSD in spinal fluid 1 10 Strychnine 1 11 Sungazing while tripping 2 Cannabis 2 1 Confusion with Jimson weed 2 2 Flashbacks due to release from fat cells 2 3 George Washington smoked cannabis 2 4 An allergic reaction to molecules found in marijuana killed Bruce Lee 2 5 Reefer madness 2 6 Smoking or chasing cannabis with tobacco increases the high 2 7 Some Lucky Strike cigarettes contained cannabis 2 8 Popularity in the United States in the 1960s 3 MDMA ecstasy 3 1 MDMA drains spinal fluid 3 2 Stacks Single double triple etc 4 Methamphetamine 4 1 Lung damage from recrystallization 4 2 Strawberry Quik 5 Heroin 5 1 Cotton fever 5 2 Cheese 6 Phencyclidine PCP 6 1 Embalming fluid 6 2 Rodney King was on PCP at the time of his 1991 beating and arrest 6 3 Man slices off his face and feeds it to dogs 6 4 Superhuman strength 7 Psilocybin mushrooms 7 1 Super Mario connection to psilocybin mushrooms 8 Designer drugs 8 1 Cannibalism from bath salts 9 General 9 1 Drugs smuggled in baby s corpse 9 2 Drug laced candy or lollipops given to schoolchildren 9 3 Drug related Halloween legends 9 4 Gnome legend 9 5 Homeopathic drug water 10 Drug testing 10 1 Secondhand exposure will cause a positive test 10 2 High doses of niacin will help you pass 11 See also 12 ReferencesLysergic acid diethylamide LSD editSome of the strangest urban legends told are those about lysergic acid diethylamide LSD a potent psychedelic drug that gained popularity in several countries in the 1960s and 1970s and experienced a resurgence in the mid 2010s to present The drug s relation to the 1960s counterculture was likely part of the reason for such legends Babysitter places baby in the oven while high on LSD edit Main article The Baby Roast This is an unverifiable drug scare story dating to the 1960s of a hippie babysitter girl putting a baby in the oven and a turkey in the bassinet It has been debunked 1 by Snopes com This myth is parodied in The Simpsons episode The Secret War of Lisa Simpson 2 in which the children go on a school field trip to a scared straight wax museum at the local police station One exhibit contains a wax dummy of a hippie woman eating a sandwich with a baby in it Chief Wiggum says That s right she s got the munchies for a California Cheeseburger In May 2009 partial ostension of this legend may have occurred when an Ohio man high on PCP allegedly tried to put his 28 day old son into a conventional oven only to be stopped in time by the child s mother 3 Also in March 2010 a Kentucky man put his five week old baby in an oven without turning it on and without any injury while drunk and high on marijuana that he had smoked earlier that night that he alleged made him feel strange and suspected of being laced with a different drug that made him hallucinate he was also tired from working 4 In 2005 China Arnold murdered her near month old baby with a microwave oven but she claimed to be under the influence of alcohol not LSD 5 6 There are a limited number of cases reported in which babies were put into microwaves though these cases were not known to involve any drugs 7 8 These were often cases of deliberate infanticide However there have been no known cases of microwaving or baking babies involving LSD specifically or any other psychedelic drug including cannabis There are however many reported cases of psychotic violence under the influence of PCP see below PCP a dissociative anesthetic is unrelated to LSD a psychedelic drug Bad acid edit A bad trip is easily caused by an expectation or fear of ill effects which may later be blamed on bad acid This legend was made famous at the 1969 Woodstock festival when concert goers were warned to stay away from the brown acid which was allegedly bad 9 One possible reason people believe that they had bad acid could be because they were simply sold a much higher dose than usual which is not uncommon due to the inherent lack of quality control of illicit drugs and with LSD in particular being effective at microgram rather than milligram doses The stronger the dose the stronger and potentially more anxiety provoking the trip can get However drugs sometimes falsely represented by sellers as LSD in the 1970s were actually PCP amphetamine or other drugs that have quite different and often unfavorable effects from LSD causing unwitting users to incorrectly attribute a bad trip to LSD There are now many research chemicals DOB 10 11 2C I 12 DOC 13 DOI 14 etc that can be nearly indistinguishable from real LSD before use and thus can be easily confused with bad acid Some of these such as 25I NBOMe are even potent enough for psychoactive doses to fit on blotter paper and may occasionally be sold as LSD when the latter is scarce The idea of adulterating blotter LSD with these chemicals however has no known basis in fact citation needed Bananadine LSD edit Main article Bananadine The false claim states that it is possible to synthesize LSD or some similar hallucinogenic drug called bananadine from banana peels or other common household foods and chemicals The actual synthesis of LSD usually requires advanced knowledge and experience in organic chemistry and requires both expensive laboratory equipment and expensive carefully controlled precursor chemicals Originating from a recipe originally published as a hoax in the Berkeley Barb in March 1967 15 variants of this legend often circulate on the Internet and were popular on BBSs well before the widespread availability of Internet access through William Powell s The Anarchist Cookbook This book claimed Musa sapientum Bananadine was a mild psychoactive drug found in banana peels The slang terms mellow yellow and saffron for the color of the peels were borrowed from the 1966 Donovan song Mellow Yellow perhaps because the phrase electrical banana is mentioned in one of the lines According to The Rolling Stone Illustrated Encyclopedia of Rock and Roll Donovan claimed he was actually referring to a banana shaped vibrator 16 failed verification Blue star tattoos edit Main article Blue star tattoo legend This legend frequently surfaces in American elementary and middle schools in the form of a flyer that has been photocopied through many generations which is distributed to parents by concerned school officials It has also become popular on Internet mailing lists and websites This legend states that a temporary lick and stick tattoo soaked in LSD and made in the form of a blue star or of popular children s cartoon characters is being distributed to children in the area in order to get them addicted to LSD The flyer lists an inaccurate description of the effects of LSD some attribution typically to a well regarded hospital or a vaguely specified adviser to the president and instructs parents to contact police if they come across the blue star tattoos No actual cases of LSD distribution to children in this manner have ever been documented LSD is not addictive and it is unlikely to be abused by an unwitting user Therefore there is no plausible motivation for a drug dealer to distribute LSD in this manner 17 Legally insane edit There is an urban legend that a person who has used LSD more than seven times is automatically declared legally insane The same claim is often suggested with large doses the difference being that the person is considered psychotic only for the duration of the trip An extension of this legend is that a person who does LSD more than X number of times is permanently disqualified from the military as a result of being legally insane a version which was likely inspired by wishful thinking of drug using draft dodgers in the 1960s But no such law exists at least not in the United States 18 However the United States Air Force has regulations limiting and prohibiting recruitment of pre service drug users including prohibition of proven or admitted LSD users 19 A version of this legend was repeated as fact on TV s Dragnet series in 1967 in an episode revolving around the use of LSD before it was made illegal The script described a shipment containing one pound of LSD tabs enough to turn the entire population of Los Angeles into dangerous psychotics on the premise that one dose made a person legally insane due to the recurrence of completely unpredictable flashbacks throughout the user s life after a single dose LSD causes genetic mutations edit Beginning in 1967 studies raised concerns that LSD might produce genetic damage 20 or developmental abnormalities in fetuses However these initial reports were based on in vitro studies or were poorly controlled and have not been substantiated In studies of chromosomal changes in human users and in monkeys the balance of evidence suggests no increase in chromosomal damage For example white blood cells of people who had been given LSD in a clinical setting were examined for visible chromosomal abnormalities overall there appeared to be no lasting changes 20 Several studies have been conducted using illicit LSD users and provide a less clear picture Interpretation of this data is generally complicated by factors such as the unknown chemical composition of street LSD concurrent use of other psychoactive drugs and diseases such as hepatitis in the sampled populations It seems possible that the small number of genetic abnormalities reported in users of street LSD is either coincidental or related to factors other than a toxic effect of pure LSD 20 A 2008 medical review concluded The available data suggest that pure LSD does not cause chromosomal abnormalities spontaneous abortions or congenital malformations 21 Another large study published in 2022 found no evidence to support the urban myth 22 However this refutation has not stopped this perennial legend from being told nor has it stopped the jokes about such mutations allegedly messing up the children of the Baby Boomers Man permanently thinks he is an orange and is terrified of being turned into a glass of orange juice edit Another common legend again dating back to the 1960s was that a man who took LSD went insane and permanently thought that he was a glass of orange juice Because of this he could never bend over slept upright and did not make any sudden movements over fear of being spilt Alternative versions sometimes have the man thinking he is a glass of milk or a whole orange Another version of this myth states that the man believed he had become an orange and was afraid he would be peeled by his friends 23 Police officer unwittingly drinks LSD edit In this legend which dates back to 1970 a police or customs officer pulls over a driver believed to have been drinking sees that the driver has a water bottle and demands a taste of it to see if it contains alcohol The officer does not taste any alcohol so the driver either gets off completely or merely gets a speeding ticket Shortly afterward the officer begins tripping very hard and stares into space since the swig of water he took actually contained numerous hits of LSD In some versions of the legend the officer consumes enough LSD to actually go insane According to Snopes com there are no verifiable reports of this ever happening even decades after the legend was first told and it is thus considered spurious 24 Permatripping and retention of LSD in spinal fluid edit This legend may have its foundation in the fact that chronic use can result in flashbacks and hallucinogen persisting perception disorder HPPD 25 There remains no consensus regarding the nature and causes of HPPD or flashbacks A study of 44 HPPD subjects who had previously ingested LSD showed EEG abnormalities 26 Given that some symptoms have environmental triggers it may represent a failure to adjust visual processing to changing environmental conditions There are no explanations for why only some individuals develop HPPD Those affected by HPPD are not psychotic as they clearly recognize the unrealistic nature of their visual disturbances 27 Explanations in terms of LSD physically remaining in the body for months or years after consumption have been discounted by experimental evidence citation needed LSD is metabolized by the liver and has an elimination half life of around 2 5 to 4 hours 28 Strychnine edit Anti drug educators frequently tell their students some variant on the theme of inevitable strychnine poisoning through LSD use for example that strychnine is commonly sold as a cheaper substitute for LSD by unscrupulous drug dealers that strychnine is a byproduct of LSD synthesis that the body produces strychnine as a result of LSD metabolism or that strychnine is used as a preservative to prevent the otherwise natural rapid decomposition of LSD allowing it to be stored or that strychnine is somehow necessary to bond LSD to blotter paper None of this is true 29 These claims may even be believed and propagated by drug users themselves In reality most hallucinogens cause some degree of mental or physical discomfort after the trip is over This is an indirect effect of the drug 29 not strychnine or any other adulterant Additionally strychnine is one of the most bitter substances known with a detection threshold of 1 part per million well below toxic levels 29 Finally the dangerous dose of strychnine is too high to be contained in a blotter square 29 Strychnine has indeed rarely been discovered mixed with LSD and other drugs in a few samples recovered by law enforcement agencies but these were all found in murder or attempted murder investigations where someone was being specifically targeted for poisoning and not associated with recreational LSD use 29 A related myth is that a new type of gang initiation requires the initiate to put a mixture of LSD and strychnine on the buttons of as many payphones as possible This too is debunked by the urban legends website Snopes com 30 Sungazing while tripping edit A popular legend dating back to the 1960s it has been claimed that several people took LSD and stared at the sun going blind as a result This myth appeared in 1967 on the cop show Dragnet and twice in the mainstream news media The legend is considered to be unfounded since in 1968 the source of the hoax Norman M Yoder commissioner of the Office of the Blind in the Pennsylvania State Welfare Department admitted that he had completely made up the story because of his concern over illegal LSD use by children 31 After the sun gazing on LSD story was widely publicized a small number of case reports were published in the medical literature which describe this phenomenon temporarily occurring 32 33 In one case the patient was a teenage girl described as having a hysterical personality who heard warnings about staring at the sun under LSD in a school anti drug lecture and thought this would be a neat thing and in another case the patient had paranoid schizophrenia 32 Cannabis editFurther information List of cannabis hoaxes Many misleading urban legends about cannabis exist Like LSD rumors many were spread during the 1960s and 1970s and are believed to continuously circulate today These widespread legends claim that it is easy to overdose on the smokeable variant of cannabis and that it is extremely dangerous and addictive when compared to alcohol and tobacco Withdrawal from heavy chronic cannabis use does not usually exceed 3 4 days but it has the potential to be psychologically addictive 34 35 36 37 Withdrawal symptoms are generally mild loss of appetite insomnia feelings of uneasiness anxiety irritability craving 38 tension stomach ache 39 and headache 40 all being common symptoms There are studies that show no actual increased risk of cancer from smoking marijuana even when duration of use is expanded over several years 41 In fact some studies indicate THC to have anticancer properties with studies showing tumor reduction in mice 42 Confusion with Jimson weed edit Historically and possibly related to the Reefer Madness legend some people particularly Americans had confused cannabis with Jimson weed Datura stramonium Jimson weed which grows wild in the United States and several other countries is a potent deliriant which can cause true hallucinations and delusions that are believed by the user to be real as opposed to the pseudohallucinations and perceptual distortions typically caused by cannabis 43 Confusion could have resulted from the fact that Datura s common name contains the word weed which is also a slang term for cannabis and the fact that both plants as well as others have been given the moniker locoweed in the first half of the 20th century Aside from these superficial similarities the two plants are not related do not resemble one another and are very unlikely to be confused Jimson weed is highly toxic and can cause delirium confusion hallucinations blurred vision photophobia dry mouth urinary retention hyperthermia incoordination hypertension and rapid heartbeat among other effects An overdose or suspected overdose on this substance is considered a medical emergency as it can cause seizures coma or death by cardiac arrest all parts of Datura plants contain dangerous levels of the tropane alkaloids specifically atropine hyoscyamine and scopolamine which are classified as deliriants and or anticholinergics 44 45 Flashbacks due to release from fat cells edit Similar to one of the most enduring myths about LSD and also somewhat related to the multi day impairment legend described further down on this list this legend claims that residual THC stored in fat cells gets released spontaneously into the bloodstream in enough quantities to get one high again long after the last use of cannabis be it days weeks or even months later 46 This legend is typically accompanied by anecdotal evidence of people who experience a high after doing exercise of some sort While somewhat more biologically plausible than the discredited LSD legend due to the fat solubility of THC this phenomenon remains scientifically unproven A 2009 study of rats that involved injecting them with large quantities of THC equivalent to 5 10 joints per day in humans each day for ten days straight then subjecting them to simulated severe stress or food deprivation led to double the blood levels of THC COOH two days after the last THC exposure compared to rats that were neither stressed nor deprived of food 47 If such results occurred in humans then it is theoretically possible for a chronic cannabis user to fail a drug test long after the usual detection time due to exercise dieting or severe stress shortly before the test and several anecdotal reports of this exist However there is currently no hard evidence that enough active THC would be released to get one high or cause flashbacks One should also note that flashbacks from psychoactive drugs in general are now known to be psychological phenomena by whom and drug residues typically play no significant role in their occurrence and recurrence As for the anecdotes about exercise they likely experienced a runner s high due to their bodies releasing endorphins which are endogenous opioid agonists along with anandamide and other endogenous cannabinoid agonists 48 These flashbacks have also been reported after one has stretched or stood up sat or lay down abruptly 49 In addition some studies find that the body produces endocannabinoids such as anandamide during exercise which may also explain such effects since they activate the same receptors as THC 50 51 George Washington smoked cannabis edit Further information Thomas Jefferson hemp smoking hoax There is a common belief that George Washington and or other Founding Fathers such as Thomas Jefferson used cannabis for its psychoactive or medicinal properties 52 53 This has even made its way into popular films such as Dazed and Confused Both Washington and Jefferson grew cannabis to produce hemp and Washington used hemp fiber to make clothes for his slaves but there is no direct evidence that either Washington or Jefferson consumed it for its psychoactive properties 53 Washington is commonly mis quoted as saying Make the most of the Indian hemp seed and sow it everywhere often cited as a note to his gardener published in The Washington Papers 54 However the closest phrase to this in The Washington Papers is in a letter to William Pearce I am very glad to hear that the Gardener has saved so much of the St foin seed and that of the India Hemp Make the most you can of both by sowing them again in drills The Hemp may be sown any where 55 In The Papers of George Washington hemp is defined as Cannabis sativa grown for fiber 56 and Indian hemp typically refers to the closely related Cannabis indica 57 While Washington was growing cannabis for its fiber both of these species are also cultivated for their psychoactive and medicinal properties When cannabis is grown for its medicinal or psychoactive properties male plants are routinely separated from females to prevent pollination as non pollinated female plants produce the most potent and prized flowering tops 58 known as sinsemilla from the Spanish sin semilla meaning without seed 58 To produce sinsemilla the sexes must be separated before pollination occurs 58 On August 7 1765 Washington wrote in his diary Began to separate the Male from the Female hemp at Do rather too late 56 While this has been taken as evidence that Washington was growing cannabis for its psychoactive or medicinal properties The Straight Dope points out that later entries in Washington s diary suggest that he divided the plants because the males made stronger fiber while the female plants produced the seed needed for the next year s crop 53 Two days after he wrote the aforementioned entry in his diary Washington wrote that he had put some Hemp in the Rivr to Rot 56 a technique called water retting used for producing hemp not psychoactive cannabis 53 The following month he wrote that he Began to Pull the Seed Hemp but it was not sufficiently ripe and three weeks later that the Hempseed seems to be in good order for getting that is of a proper ripeness 56 The introductory editorial for the June 2010 cannabinoid themed issue of the British Journal of Pharmacology said that there are sources that suggest that chronic tooth ache may have led the first President of the United States George Washington to grow the plant for medicinal purposes 59 though these sources are not cited The cover of the issue featured images of Washington and Queen Victoria placed on either side of a cannabis leaf 59 An allergic reaction to molecules found in marijuana killed Bruce Lee edit A number of rumours surfaced surrounding the cause of action film star Bruce Lee s death in 1973 one of which was that he had been killed by the consumption of cannabis 60 Lee died of a cerebral edema several hours after taking the painkiller and muscle relaxant equagesic 60 His autopsy showed trace amounts of cannabis in his stomach and he had been known to use cannabis 60 61 However a doctor at the coroner s hearing was quoted as saying that the cannabis in Lee s stomach was no more significant than if Bruce had drunk a cup of tea that day 60 Lee s physician Donald Langford and Peter Wu a doctor who had treated Lee for another edema ten weeks earlier believed that the fatal edema could have been caused by a rare allergic reaction to an alkaloid in cannabis as a large quantity of hashish was removed from his stomach during the earlier edema and he had been warned not to use it again 61 62 Wu told the coroner he believed the death was due to hypersensitivity to either cannabis or equagesic 62 However Ronald D Teare a professor of forensic medicine at the University of London who was flown in to be the chief expert in the coroner s report said that it was both irresponsible and irrational to attribute either edema to cannabis and concluded the fatal edema was due to a rare reaction to equagesic 60 62 Teare who had supervised nearly 100 000 autopsies and provided evidence for nearly 20 000 inquests in his 35 years of experience was echoed by R R Lycette the clinical pathologist at Queen Elizabeth Hospital 62 Lycette told the hearing that his death could not have been caused by cannabis and that Lee had died from an edema caused by a reaction to one or both of the ingredients in equagesic 62 At the time in Hong Kong cannabis was seen in an extremely negative light worse than opium and was considered a foreign drug with sinister and evil undertones 62 Bruce Thomas author of Bruce Lee Fighting Spirit stated that this view had a massive impact on the official findings and that Wu s inclusion of cannabis as a suspected cause of death reflected this cultural and even political pressure 62 Wu later said in a 1992 interview with Thomas Professor Teare was a forensic scientist recommended by Scotland Yard he was brought in as the expert so we can t contradict his testimony The dosage of cannabis is neither precise nor predictable but I ve never known anyone to die simply from taking it 62 Although it could not be completely ruled out that cannabis caused the edema Teare s view was accepted by the coroner and the official verdict was death by misadventure caused by a reaction to equigesic 60 62 Cannabis was not included as a possible cause of Lee s death 62 Reefer madness edit Main article Cannabis and psychosis Originating in the 1930s this myth was the basis for films like Reefer Madness and used by Harry Anslinger of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics as justification for outlawing cannabis The allegation was that even the calmest most normal person could be transformed into a psychopathic killer or rapist solely from smoking a joint No relationship has ever been proven linking such crimes to the acute intoxication of cannabis alone and cannabis psychological effects tend to be more associated with pacifism and inactivity than with aggression For example studies of the Jamaican working class showed no difference in the crime rates between users and non user of cannabis 63 Smoking or chasing cannabis with tobacco increases the high edit In many places cannabis is routinely mixed with tobacco when rolled into joints In North America cannabis in any form is also often chased with a tobacco cigarette and hollowed out cigars filled with cannabis blunts are also popular in some subcultures Some users say that smoking tobacco increases the cannabis high and this is often attributed to either the nicotine or additives such as menthol Until recently this was based solely on anecdotal evidence There may be at least some truth to this legend as a 2005 study found that a transdermal nicotine patch modestly enhanced the subjective high of cannabis relative to a placebo patch but only in males Females actually saw a slight reduction in subjective effects 64 Reasons for the enhancement are not well understood and this study appears to be the only one as of 2010 that found such effects However another study found a significant downside to the practice It appears that tobacco which is known to be highly addictive also enhances the likelihood of developing cannabis dependence symptoms when the two substances are used concurrently 65 Some Lucky Strike cigarettes contained cannabis edit It has been claimed the cigarette brand Lucky Strike is so named because every so often a consumer of the product would have a lucky strike finding a cannabis spliff in a pack of cigarettes The rumor varies in how often the cannabis cigarette would be included anywhere from one in every thousand cartons to one in every pack It is unclear when this myth originated Snopes com claims it has been floating around for many years Lucky Strike s slogan It s Toasted fueled belief in the myth further toasted being one slang term for being high on cannabis Despite the popularity of the myth there are no reliable reports of any Lucky Strike cigarette containing cannabis The name Lucky Strike in reality is only a marketing ploy implying to customers that obtaining their brand is a Lucky Strike The It s Toasted slogan refers to the product s tobacco being toasted instead of sun dried making a supposedly better tasting product 66 Other urban legends offshoot from this one One of the explanations for the origin of flipping a lucky cigarette upside down claims the practice originated from the Lucky Strike myth it is presumed the superstition arose from flipping the marijuana containing cigarette upside down in order to save it for last 66 Popularity in the United States in the 1960s edit Although the 1960s are commonly perceived as a time of rampant marijuana use compared with the present day in a 1969 Gallup poll only 4 of American adults had tried marijuana and 34 did not know its effects 67 In contrast later Gallup polls show that the percentage of adults who had tried marijuana had risen to 33 by 1985 and 34 by 1999 68 MDMA ecstasy editThe third most common illicit drug that is the source of urban legends is 3 4 methylenedioxymethamphetamine MDMA better known as ecstasy In the United States this substance was banned in 1985 and other countries followed suit as well Among American youth MDMA was most popular in the 1990s and early 2000s peaking in 2001 and declining thereafter 69 It was during this time of rather faddish use that numerous urban legends and misconceptions began to surface and be spread through the media and not all of them necessarily originated from anti drug organizations MDMA drains spinal fluid edit This myth appears to be derived from research in 1994 This myth was circulating in the UK as early as 1991 in which serotonin breakdown products were measured in the spinal fluid of ecstasy users However it was the researchers not the drug who drained the fluid for the purpose of testing 70 Nonetheless this legend and related ones about it damaging one s spinal cord and or spinal column which is also false was popularized in 2000 by Eminem s songs Drug Ballad and The Kids 71 Stacks Single double triple etc edit Many ecstasy users describe the potency of various ecstasy pills in terms of their stack such as double stack or triple stack pills These claims are dubious as there is no way to verify potency objectively without proper testing The term stack is not intended to measure potency of ecstasy pills but it is used as a measurement of mass Single stacks weigh in at 0 20 grams doubles at 0 40 grams and triples at 0 60 grams Furthermore a high percentage of what is sold as ecstasy may contain a combination of MDMA and one or more other substances or may in fact contain no MDMA at all For these reasons the stack system of strength description is not necessarily trustworthy as is commonly the case in the underground drug market Methamphetamine editThough initially there were not very many urban legends about methamphetamine crank crystal meth ice the meth epidemic of the late 1990s and early 2000s especially in the USA led to quite a few new legends Lung damage from recrystallization edit One meth legend refers to the method of administration in which the user will heat melt crystal methamphetamine and inhale the resulting methamphetamine vapor The legend states that the drug once inhaled will re crystallize in large amounts inside the lungs damaging them in the process This is a false claim as crystallized methamphetamine is always in the form of a salt usually methamphetamine hydrochloride which is highly soluble in water as well as hydrophilic and is instantly absorbed into the user s bloodstream via the alveoli However intravenous methylphenidate Ritalin use results in a type of lung damage commonly known as Ritalin lung 72 Methylphenidate tablets are crushed and dissolved into solution for IV injection The tablets contain talc and other particulates which can deposit in the lung talcosis and result in severe emphysema affecting all the lobes of the lung 73 The Ritalin lung effect could be a possible source of how rumors about methamphetamine damaging the lungs could have surfaced Strawberry Quik edit Main article Strawberry Quik meth myth Another meth legend is that dealers are selling colored and flavored meth resembling candy often with names like Strawberry Quick originating from an idea that dealers would mix the drug with strawberry flavored Nesquik to entice children to buy it It was first reported in 2007 in the western United States and children were allegedly ingesting it thinking it was candy and ending up in the ER According to Snopes com there is no hard evidence as of October 2008 update that flavored meth is being handed out in schoolyards nor that children are mistaking meth for candy 74 Heroin editCotton fever edit Cotton fever is a high fever supposedly caused by injecting cotton fibers into the bloodstream when shooting up heroin Cotton is sometimes used as a crude filter for particulate matter prior to IV injection Other commonly blamed substances include fiberglass if a cigarette filter was used cigarette filters do not contain fiberglass or dirt if Mexican heroin was injected 75 In general cotton fever refers to a fever that users believe is caused by inanimate particulate matter injected into the bloodstream In reality the particulate matter causing cotton fever is bacteria from lack of sterile technique Most cases of cotton fever resolve as the body clears the infection Users will often seek medical attention when cotton fever persists Persistent cotton fever is often infective endocarditis Although endotoxin shed by the bacteria Enterobacter agglomerans which colonizes cotton plants has been implicated as the cause of cotton fever 76 most clinical cases demonstrate blood cultures positive for skin and fecal bacteria Cheese edit Main article Cheese recreational drug Cheese or Tylenol with Smack is a heroin based recreational drug that came to the attention of the media inside and outside the United States 77 after a string of deaths among adolescents in the Dallas Fort Worth Metroplex between 2005 and 2007 It is generally reported to be a mixture of heroin and Tylenol PM an OTC acetaminophen and diphenhydramine combination or its generic equivalent in varying ratios It seems likely that the concept was originally created as a joke and after seizures of low purity heroin cut with paracetamol acetaminophen validated the claims the DEA issued a warning 78 Although the source of the original hoax is gone newspapers and media outlets continue to make reference to each other with no mention of any primary sources perpetuating the myth of cheese as starter heroin for children However there may have been some ostension of this legend in 2007 involving a few individuals in Texas 79 In the South Park episode Major Boobage which aired for the first time on 28 March 2008 cheesing referred to a moral panic about children using cat urine to get high Phencyclidine PCP editEmbalming fluid edit A commonly held misconception is that phencyclidine PCP angel dust is the same as or is synthesized from embalming fluid Some people believing this myth have actually attempted to smoke cigarettes or cannabis dipped in real embalming fluid i e formaldehyde which is highly toxic Conversely some users of PCP laced cannabis believe and are often told that it contains embalming fluid proper and not PCP or that the slang term dust really means embalming fluid proper Sometimes the two substances are even mixed together in a further ostension of this legend 80 81 The combination might be called fry wet illy sherm worm water water amp dust ed or other names Rodney King was on PCP at the time of his 1991 beating and arrest edit The Rodney King police beating case in Los Angeles was a source of much controversy and outrage as well as urban legends Because King resisted arrest with several officers needed to subdue him he was assumed to be on PCP at the time due to its reputation for inciting violent and unpredictable behavior coupled with an inability to feel pain often misinterpreted as superhuman strength However toxicology results show that the only drugs found in his system were alcohol and traces of marijuana 82 83 Man slices off his face and feeds it to dogs edit One legend holds that a man who while under the influence of the drug thoroughly sliced off pieces of his own face including his eyes to feed to his pet dogs Some versions of this tale say he suffered permanent brain damage as well This legend is remarkably similar to what the character Mason Verger did in Thomas Harris 1999 novel Hannibal The legend however dates back earlier than 1999 and can be traced to former New York homicide detective Vernon J Geberth who writes about it in his book Practical Homicide Investigation According to Geberth this actually did occur to a man named Michael and Geberth was one of the detectives called to the scene 84 A 1989 book by Dr Joseph Sacco 85 also mentions this story albeit with a few differences in the details Superhuman strength edit Some reports cite a widely held belief that PCP can give its users superhuman strength for the duration of its effects 86 and there are several anecdotes alleging this phenomenon However it does not typically make the user significantly stronger in reality than they otherwise would be The exception is when a user experiences excited delirium a severe and life threatening reaction that occasionally results from use of PCP as well as various stimulants such as cocaine and amphetamines Excited delirium has also been reported to occur without any drug use and the increased strength that results is most likely caused by a massive increase in adrenaline 87 Psilocybin mushrooms editSuper Mario connection to psilocybin mushrooms edit One legend that is popular among both the drug and video gaming subcultures is that the mushroom powerup in Super Mario games is actually based on psilocybin mushrooms Somewhat lending credit to the legend Shigeru Miyamoto the creator of the Super Mario series has stated that he chose mushrooms for their relationship to magical realms and has drawn connections to other works featuring mushrooms with mysterious powers such as Lewis Carroll s Alice s Adventures in Wonderland a story in which eating specific mushrooms cause one to change size 88 The mushrooms depicted in the game white circles on red caps also have a similar appearance to Amanita muscaria which while being quite distinct from psilocybin mushrooms magic mushrooms still have hallucinogenic properties 89 and have been used by humans for their intoxicating effects for hundreds of years 90 Designer drugs editThe advent of novel illegal or quasi legal designer drugs intended as substitutes or alternatives to illegal drugs has given rise to several new legends as well Cannibalism from bath salts edit In 2012 novel substituted cathinones nicknamed bath salts as a result of mephedrone originally being sold as bath salts in the US to evade consumer protection laws 91 were implicated in several violent attacks including some highly publicized cases of cannibalism 92 However the most well known cannibal attacker from Miami Rudy Eugene tested negative for all drugs known to be nicknamed bath salts and every other known psychoactive substance except traces of cannabis 93 General editIn addition to legends about specific drugs there are also some more generic ones that are often applied to several types of drugs Typically these legends involve rather morbid themes and or targeted children but some are told with more levity for the purpose of humor Drugs smuggled in baby s corpse edit This legend dating back to the early 1970s and first appearing on the Internet in 1996 claims that drug traffickers are smuggling illegal drugs typically cocaine in hollowed out dead babies to avoid detection 94 Allegedly tourists babies are kidnapped killed cut open filled with drugs and sewn shut so the contraband can be more readily sneaked over the border However according to U S Customs and other law enforcement agencies there are no verifiable reports of this ever happening and thus this myth is unfounded 95 Drug laced candy or lollipops given to schoolchildren edit Plenty of lollipops in hippy stores sold in countries like the UK and Canada have been alleged to contain CBD a non intoxicating phytocannabinoid age limits on these are unclear and they are sold passively This legend which surfaced on the Internet just in time for Halloween in October 2004 claimed that drug dealers were giving lollipops laced with drugs typically a combination of THC and PCP to unsuspecting children and causing them great harm Such suckers are allegedly referred to as dro pops or something to that effect and various towns around the country have had their own versions of the legend 96 According to the U S DEA suckers containing THC and or PCP were found and confiscated in Chicago in the spring of 2004 They also report that in 2003 and 2004 some psilocybin mushroom chocolate candies were seized near Amarillo Texas 97 and that hollowed out lollipops filled with heroin have been seized in New York City 98 The goal of doing so was likely to evade detection by law enforcement by disguising the drugs as candy There is no evidence that these were ever given to children much less that any such children were harmed or even that such lollipops have been found outside of these specific locations or anywhere since early 2004 96 Thus this legend can be considered to be in a similar vein as the infamous blue star tattoo legend Drug related Halloween legends edit Related to the above legend various drugs have also found their way into the more general and perennial Halloween poisoning legends Allegedly unsuspecting trick or treaters are given candy or sometimes fruits laced with poisons needles razor blades and drugs by strangers However virtually all reports of this happening are now known to be either hoaxes events unrelated to Halloween candy or non random poisonings by relatives made to look random 99 The latest manifestation of drug related Halloween legends was a prediction by Sheriff Lee Baca of Los Angeles that cannabis edibles from medical marijuana dispensaries would possibly end up in the hands of trick or treaters on Halloween in 2010 Baca even went so far as to confiscate cannabis edibles from circulation in an attempt to prevent this from happening and displayed them on television two days before Halloween Again there is no evidence that cannabis laced treats were ever given out to trick or treaters in 2010 or in any other year 100 101 Gnome legend edit Another legend involves a group of teenagers who while drunk and or tripping on some sort of hallucinogen find what they perceive to be a gnome sometimes a dwarf hobgoblin or smurf capture it and bring it home They sleep off the drug s effects and the next morning they find out that the gnome was really a lost and very frightened child Though the story may be told by some tellers in a negative light it may also have a positive spin in that the teens become unwitting heroes in finding a missing child whose parents as well as the police had been unable to find According to Snopes com the legend had first surfaced in 2004 and as of 2020 update the legend s truth status remains undetermined and unverifiable 102 In some versions of a legend the gnome is not a child but a person with dwarfism or Down Syndrome some have even gone as far to say it was a dead baby Homeopathic drug water edit In 2004 2005 an Internet rumor was being spread that claimed that LSD and other drugs were being diluted with water to extremely low concentrations which allegedly made the drugs more powerful yet cheaper and undetectable 103 This is related to the pseudo scientific Law of Infinitesimals one of the principles behind homeopathy However there is no evidence that this actually has effects different from a placebo or that a significant number of users or dealers were ever actually doing this Drug testing editThe increasingly common practice of drug testing especially urinalysis has led to an increase in the number of drug users looking for ways to beat the tests and has spawned a number of urban legends as a result One should note that time is the only scientifically proven method for certainly passing a test apart from not consuming any substances at all that are likely to be tested for However this does not stop users from getting creative in their attempts to somehow shorten the detection times and or mask the contents of their fluid specimens with varying degrees of success or lack thereof Secondhand exposure will cause a positive test edit This legend is technically true but highly misleading According to a U S Army study the amount of secondhand cannabis smoke needed to cause a false positive result failure is quite large indeed and would require being sealed in an unventilated car or small room filled with marijuana being actively smoked often referred to as a hotbox for several hours Hair testing however is a different matter particularly with passive exposure to crack cocaine which can deposit onto hair and be readily incorporated into it With regards to cannabis however typically only metabolites produced by the body and thus not found in smoke are tested rather than THC so failure is unlikely to result from non extreme passive exposure 104 105 High doses of niacin will help you pass edit Niacin also known as Vitamin B3 is speciously claimed by some to burn it out of one s system when taken at high doses 250 500 mg per day While some Internet and other sources claim that this works wonders there is no supporting scientific evidence 106 Very high doses can also cause adverse side effects 107 This legend may have been inadvertently inspired by Narconon a Scientology based drug rehabilitation program that uses exercise saunas and dangerously high doses of niacin and other vitamins to detox It is also part of L Ron Hubbard s general Purification Rundown which can supposedly remove pollutants as well as drug residues Although some drug users claim that this has worked 108 there are currently no peer reviewed scientific studies to back these methods up 109 See also editMoral panicReferences edit Microwaved Baby snopes com 2011 10 06 Retrieved 2010 07 27 episode 4F21 The Simpsons Archive ref date May 29 2010 Archived May 30 2010 at the Wayback Machine Outrageous Euclid Dad Accused Of Putting Baby Boy In Oven Pleads Not Guilty Woio com Archived from the original on 2011 07 18 Retrieved 2010 07 27 Man charged after baby found unhurt in oven Hannah James 20 July 2007 Drunken mum microwaved one month old baby Daily News New York NY USA Mortimer Zuckerman The Associated Press Retrieved 27 February 2012 Life in prison for Ohio mom in microwave baby case Daily News New York NY USA Mortimer Zuckerman The Associated Press 8 September 2008 Retrieved 27 February 2012 Man accused of burning baby in microwave Digitaljournal com 2007 05 16 Retrieved 2010 07 27 Wasted and Basted Snopes com 2011 10 06 Retrieved 2010 07 27 No brown acid Woodstock anniversary concert draws a cell phone crowd Associated Press Archive August 15 1998 United States Drug Enforcement Administration October 2005 LSD BLOTTER ACID MIMIC CONTAINING 4 BROMO 2 5 DIMETHOXY AMPHETAMINE DOB SEIZED NEAR BURNS OREGON PDF Microgram Bulletin 38 10 Archived from the original PDF on October 18 2012 Retrieved September 10 2013 United States Drug Enforcement Administration November 2006 BLOTTER ACID MIMICS CONTAINING 4 BROMO 2 5 DIMETHOXY AMPHETAMINE DOB IN CONCORD CALIFORNIA PDF Microgram Bulletin 39 11 Archived from the original PDF on October 18 2012 Retrieved September 10 2013 United States Drug Enforcement Administration February 2007 BLOTTER ACID MIMICS CONTAINING 4 BROMO 2 5 DIMETHOXYAMPHETAMINE DOB IN CONCORD CALIFORNIA PDF Microgram Bulletin 40 2 Archived from the original PDF on September 30 2013 Retrieved September 10 2013 United States Drug Enforcement Administration December 2007 LSD BLOTTER ACID MIMICS CONTAINING 4 CHLORO 2 5 DIMETHOXY AMPHETAMINE DOC IN CONCORD CALIFORNIA PDF Microgram Bulletin 40 12 Archived from the original PDF on October 17 2012 Retrieved September 10 2013 United States Drug Enforcement Administration March 2008 LSD BLOTTER ACID MIMIC ACTUALLY CONTAINING A MIXTURE OF 4 CHLORO 2 5 DIMETHOXYAMPHETAMINE DOC AND 4 IODO 2 5 DIMETHOXYAMPHETAMINE DOI IN PADUCAH KENTUCKY PDF Microgram Bulletin 41 3 Archived from the original PDF on October 17 2012 Retrieved September 10 2013 Will smoking banana peels get you high Archived 2007 09 30 at the Wayback Machine The Straight Dope April 26 2002 Anthony DeCurtis James Henke Holly George Warren eds 1992 The Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock amp Roll The Definitive History of the Most Important Artists and Their Music rev ed Random House ISBN 978 0 679 73728 5 LSD Tattoos snopes com 2012 04 10 Retrieved 2010 07 27 LSD Insanity Snopes com 2005 07 09 Retrieved 2010 07 27 RECRUITING PROCEDURES FOR THE AIR FORCE COMMANDER AIR FORCE RECRUITING SERVICE Retrieved May 27 2019 a b c Dishotsky NI Loughman WD Mogar RE Lipscomb WR 1971 LSD and genetic damage PDF Science 172 3982 431 40 Bibcode 1971Sci 172 431D doi 10 1126 science 172 3982 431 PMID 4994465 S2CID 34641075 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 04 30 Retrieved 2010 06 20 Gerald G Briggs Roger K Freeman Sumner J Yaffe 2008 Drugs in pregnancy and lactation Lippincott Williams amp Wilkins ISBN 9780781778763 Ellwood Beth 2022 10 18 Large national survey suggests that the use of psychedelics is not associated with lifetime cancer development PsyPost Retrieved 2022 10 19 Citric Acid Trip Snopes com 2015 02 06 Retrieved 2010 07 27 LSD given to police officer Snopes com 2008 07 07 Retrieved 2010 07 27 Toxicity Hallucinogens LSD eMedicine Pediatrics Cardiac Disease and Critical Care Medicine Emedicine com 2017 05 03 Retrieved 2010 07 27 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Abraham H D Duffy F H 1996 Stable quantitative EEG difference in post LSD visual disorder by split half analysis Evidence for disinhibition Psychiatry Research 67 3 173 187 doi 10 1016 0925 4927 96 02833 8 PMID 8912957 S2CID 7587687 Bogenshutz M P amp Ross S 2018 Therapeutic Applications of Classic Hallucinogens Current Topics in Behavioral Neuroscience a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Drugs and Human Performance FACT SHEETS Lysergic acid diethylamide LSD NHTSA gov Archived from the original on 2013 08 05 Retrieved 2013 07 22 a b c d e Braden William The Private Sea LSD and the Search for God New York Quadrangle Books 1967 ASIN B0006BQD7C Urban Legends Reference Pages Payphone Poison Snopes com 2011 07 15 Retrieved 2010 07 27 Blinded By the Light Snopes com 2008 07 07 Retrieved 2010 07 27 a b Fuller DG April 1976 Severe solar maculopathy associated with the use of lysergic acid diethylamide LSD Am J Ophthalmol 81 4 413 6 doi 10 1016 0002 9394 76 90295 6 PMID 1266919 Schatz H Mendelblatt F April 1973 Solar retinopathy from sun gazing under the influence of LSD Br J Ophthalmol 57 4 270 3 doi 10 1136 bjo 57 4 270 PMC 1214879 PMID 4707624 IOM 1999 Mikuriya 1972 Young 1988 LaGuardia Comsn NY Mayor s Report 1944 Haney Margaret 2005 The Marijuana Withdrawal Syndrome Diagnosis and Treatment Current Psychiatry Reports 7 5 360 366 doi 10 1007 s11920 005 0036 1 PMID 16216154 S2CID 22857531 Retrieved 2023 01 06 Bucholz Kathleen K Kalmijn Jelger A Schukit Marc A Smith Tom L Wiesbeck Gerhard A 1996 An evaluation of the history of a marijuana withdrawal syndrome in a large population Addiction 91 10 1469 1478 doi 10 1111 j 1360 0443 1996 tb02251 x PMID 8917915 Retrieved 2023 01 06 Budney Alan J Hughes John R Moore Brent A Novy Pam L 2001 Marijuana Abstinence Effects in Marijuana Smokers Maintained in Their Home Environment Archives of General Psychiatry 58 10 917 924 doi 10 1001 archpsyc 58 10 917 PMID 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Archived from the original on 2010 07 29 Retrieved 2010 07 27 Craig Medical Distribution Drug Test FAQ Craigmedical com Retrieved 2010 07 27 The Real Score between Niacin and Drug Tests 2005 Nutritional supplements health guide com 2007 07 22 Retrieved 2010 07 27 Use of Niacin in Attempts to Defeat Urine Drug Testing Five States January September 2006 Cdc gov Retrieved 2010 07 27 THC Detox Guide THCClear Narconon Exposed Cs cmu edu Retrieved 2010 07 27 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Urban legends about drugs amp oldid 1187150631, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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