HerbalSniff

The idea with HerbalSniff℠ is to make consumable products that are relatively healthy to sniff made from vegetable plants that are so healthy that even kids can use it depending on approval from food and drug departments and then later on add medicinal plants but this might have a person selling age restriction. This is useful then you feeling down or when your tummy is full. The idea is to place the clean sniff into a clean usable container(from clean material) that is designed to provide a 'bullet' sniff at a time.

For 18 years and older there will be available clean mixed with secret ingredients ketamine and cocaine based products (light and strong for each) December 2023

Many private clinical psychiatrists would agree (in the beginning a private prescription might be needed as test subjects/patients/persons/individuals get approved and then the products eventually launched publicly)

Ketamine is a dissociative anesthetic used medically for induction and maintenance of anesthesia. It is also used as a treatment for depression, a pain management tool, and as a recreational drug.[18] Ketamine is a novel compound that was derived from phencyclidine in 1962 in pursuit of a safer anesthetic with fewer hallucinogenic effects.[19][20]

At anesthetic doses, ketamine induces a state of dissociative anesthesia, a trance-like state providing pain relief, sedation, and amnesia.[21] The distinguishing features of ketamine as anesthesia are preserved breathing and airway reflexes, stimulated heart function with increased blood pressure, and moderate bronchodilation.[21] At lower, sub-anesthetic doses, ketamine is a promising agent for pain and treatment-resistant depression.[22] As with many antidepressants, the results of a single administration of ketamine wane with time.[23] The long-term effects of repeated use are largely unknown, and are an area of active investigation.[24][25][26]

Liver and urinary toxicity have been reported among regular users of high doses of ketamine for recreational purposes.[27] Ketamine is an NMDA receptor pore blocker, accounting for most of its actions, but not the antidepressant effect, the mechanism of which is a matter of research and debate.[citation needed]

Ketamine was first synthesized in 1962 and approved for use in the United States in 1970.[18] It has been regularly used in veterinary medicine and was extensively used for surgical anesthesia in the Vietnam War.[28] Along with other psychotropic drugs, it is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines.[29] It is available as a generic medication.[30] When used as a recreational drug, it is found both in powder and liquid form, and is often referred to as "Special K" for its hallucinogenic and dissociative effects.[31]

Cocaine (from French: cocaïne, from Spanish: coca, ultimately from Quechua: kúka)[14] is a tropane alkaloid that acts as a central nervous system (CNS) stimulant. As an extract, it is mainly used recreationally, and often illegally for its euphoric and rewarding effects. It is also used in medicine by Indigenous South Americans for various purposes and rarely, but more formally, as a local anaesthetic or diagnostic tool by medical practitioners in more developed countries. It is primarily obtained from the leaves of two Coca species native to South America: Erythroxylum coca and E. novogranatense.[15][16] After extraction from the plant, and further processing into cocaine hydrochloride (powdered cocaine), the drug is administered by being either snorted, applied topically to the mouth, or dissolved and injected into a vein. It can also then be turned into free base form (typically crack cocaine), in which it can be heated until sublimated and then the vapours can be inhaled.[12]

Cocaine stimulates the reward pathway in the brain.[16] Mental effects may include an intense feeling of happiness, sexual arousal, loss of contact with reality, or agitation.[12] Physical effects may include a fast heart rate, sweating, and dilated pupils.[12] High doses can result in high blood pressure or high body temperature.[17] Onset of effects can begin within seconds to minutes of use, depending on method of delivery, and can last between five and ninety minutes.[12] As cocaine also has numbing and blood vessel constriction properties, it is occasionally used during surgery on the throat or inside of the nose to control pain, bleeding, and vocal cord spasm.[18]

Cocaine crosses the blood–brain barrier via a proton-coupled organic cation antiporter[19][20] and (to a lesser extent) via passive diffusion across cell membranes.[21] Cocaine blocks the dopamine transporter,[22] inhibiting reuptake of dopamine from the synaptic cleft into the pre-synaptic axon terminal; the higher dopamine levels in the synaptic cleft increase dopamine receptor activation in the post-synaptic neuron,[23][24] causing euphoria and arousal.[25] Cocaine also blocks the serotonin transporter and norepinephrine transporter, inhibiting reuptake of serotonin and norepinephrine from the synaptic cleft into the pre-synaptic axon terminal and increasing activation of serotonin receptors and norepinephrine receptors in the post-synaptic neuron, contributing to the mental and physical effects of cocaine exposure.[6]

A single dose of cocaine induces tolerance to the drug's effects.[26] Repeated use is likely to result in addiction. Addicts who abstain from cocaine may experience craving and drug withdrawal symptoms, with depression, decreased libido, decreased ability to feel pleasure, and fatigue being most common.[16] Use of cocaine increases the overall risk of death, and intravenous use potentially increases the risk of trauma and infectious diseases such as blood infections and HIV through the use of shared paraphernalia. It also increases risk of stroke, heart attack, cardiac arrhythmia, lung injury (when smoked), and sudden cardiac death.[16][27] Illicitly sold cocaine can be adulterated with fentanyl, local anesthetics, levamisole, cornstarch, quinine, or sugar, which can result in additional toxicity.[28][29] In 2017, the Global Burden of Disease study found that cocaine use caused around 7,300 deaths annually.[30]


HERBALSNIFF COMPANY UNLIMITED

Started Tuesday, 21 November 2023

HERBALSNIFF℠ is owned by CASHVAULTBANK VOLTUNLIMITED

(Service Marks ℠ : Before it is registered, it is common practice [with some legal standing] to use the service mark symbol ℠)


https://sites.google.com/view/herbalsniff