Friday, June 3, 2011

Bath Salts Victim Fell On the U.S

healthy use of bath salt
Bath salt is believed to have properties cleanse the body in the bath soaking, causing the atmosphere relaxed, and reduce stress. But there are indications of abuse when Neil Brown is in effect dangerous substances are sold as bath salts is, he took a knife and began to peel the face and stomach repeatedly. 

Brown survived, but officials say there is not much this man's fate as lucky. Many victims fell after inhaling, injecting or smoking dangerous powder sold under various names. Some people who never try bath salts to say that the effect of this powder is so strong, almost the same as methamphetamine. Meanwhile,
law enforcers and the Poison Control Center in the U.S. intensified campaign on the dangers bath salts. 

Bath salts which has been advertised with a complex chemical name is a new threat that began to bother some U.S. states. Local authorities have banned the sale of bath salts. From the Deep South to California, many emergency calls coming from victims of the use of stimulant powder containing mephedrone and methylenedioxypyrovalerone, also known as MDPV. These chemicals can cause hallucinations, paranoia, accelerated heart rate and the urge to commit suicide, according to authorities. 

Chemicals in these products are legally sold in stores and on the internet as a salt bath, and even plant food. However, they are not necessarily used for their intended on the label. Mississippi lawmaker this week began considering proposals to ban the sale of bath salts, and similar steps are being formulated in Kentucky. 

In Louisiana, bath salts prohibited by the State Poison Control Center after the local government received more than 125 phones in the last three months of 2010 related casualties result from exposure to these chemicals. 

Brown said he had tried all types of addictive drugs, from heroin to crack (a derivative of cocaine), and he was very shaken by terrifying hallucinations experienced. Brown wrote a message to the citizens of Mississippi to move away from the use of bath salts which bloom advertised. "I can not tell why I did it," Brown said, pointing to his scar. "I still feel the psychological effects." 

While Brown survived, authorities in one area of the Mississippi Sheriff said they believed there was a woman suffered an overdose because the powders bath salts. In southern Louisiana, the family of a 21-year-old man reported that their child cut his throat and ended his life by gunfire. Authorities are investigating whether the man who demanded the death penalty in the case of the death of Deputy Sheriff  Tippah County, Mississippi was under the influence of bath salts. 

Stimulants are not regulated by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), but under supervision of the federal government. Authorities claim that some brands bath salts likely sent from Europe, but still unknown country of origin bath salts is.

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