Stimulants: Drugs that speed up or excite the central nervous system and make you feel more alert, more energetic, help you stay awake for long periods of time, decrease your appetite and make you feel good. (ex. relaxed, euphoric) Examples: Caffeine, Tobacco, Cocaine Depressants: Drugs that slow down the functions of the central nervous system and make you less aware of the events around you. Examples: Alchohol, Opiales (Heroin) Hallucinogens: (Psycadelics) Drugs that distort the senses and one's awareness or perception of events. One might see or hear things that don't actually exist. Examples: Magic Mushrooms
they are different categories of drugs and a drug can fit into more than one category and these aren't the only categories. depressants are drugs that make you tired or drowsy and make you not want to engage in physical activity like weed, alcohol or heroine. Stimulants are drugs that make you energised and are often very hard or impossible to sleep on, such as meth, coke or any kind of "speed". Hallucinogens are sometimes referred to as psycadelics. These drugs confuse the neural pathways, altering your senses and changing your thought process and perception of all things. Many experience it as an entirely different realm of reality. LSD, mushrooms, peyote, DXM, DMT and salvia just to name a few.
Quite fundamentally, stimulants literally "stimulate" the central nervous system; causing stimulatory psychoactive effects & symptoms- increased heart rate, hypertension, increased blood pressure, alertness, insomnia, etc. Examples include cocaine, methamphetamine, amphetamine, methylphenidate (Ritalin), MDMA (ecstasy), & methcathinone. Other examples are caffeine; yohimbe; & ephedrine, but these drugs act via a different mechanism & do not cause as much euphoria (and abuse potential) as the later groups of drugs mentioned.
Conversely, depressant drugs quite literally "depress" the central nervous system. Peripheral effects that are oppositeof stimulatory include: lowered heart rate; lowered blood pressure; decreased breathing; etc. These sorts of drugs generally "depress" neurotransmitter activity, in that it causes more inhibitory effects resulting in anxiolytic properties, drowsiness, ataxia (discoordination), etc. Examples include: alcohol; benzodiazepines (Valium, Xanax, Klonopin); barbiturates (butalbital & phenobarbital); centrally acting muscle relaxants like carisoprodol (soma) or baclofen; and to a lesser degree opioid painkillers (heroin, morphine, codeine, hydrocodone/vicodin, oxycodone [percocet & oxycontin], methadone, buprenorphine/suboxone, etc).
Stimulants speed up brain activity whereas depressants slow down brain activity.
the duration of effect is considerably longer
they both work on the central nervous system. one making you feel druwsy and slow and the other making you tweaky awake and usually restless.
It has some effects of all three, but it's predominantly hallucinogenic, although the term hallucinogen typically is more associated with the traditional psychedelics like LSD and psilocybin. It's really more of a dissociative than a straight hallucinogen, which means it causes weird, dissociated thoughts and behavior. People can be caught up in full-blown hallucinations and not tell the difference between fantasy and reality, which is quite different from how people react to typical hallucinogens. PCP also does have both stimulant and depressant qualities. It is very stimulating at low doses and causes rapid heartbeat, while at higher doses it is a depressant and slows down heart rate and breathing.
Alcohol, particularly ethanol, is a depressant. Caffeine is a stimulant and is an alkaloid.
no
Cocaine is a stimulant. Methadone is a depressant. One jazzes you up, the other slows you down.
Suppressants speed your system up, while depressants slow you down.
Sedatives make people drowsy. These include alcohol. Stimulants are consumed to stay awake. These include coffee and Red Bull. It is highly unrecommended to mix the two in a sedative-stimulant cocktail as it can prove fatal.
stim·u·lant/ˈstimyələnt/Noun:A substance that raises levels of physiological or nervous activity in the body.Adjective:Raising levels of physiological or nervous activity in the body: "caffeine has stimulant effects on the heart".Synonyms:noun. stimulus - incentive - excitantadjective. excitant - stimulating - incentive - excitingde·pres·sant/diˈpresənt/Adjective:(chiefly of a drug) Reducing functional or nervous activity.Noun:A depressant drug.Synonyms: adjective. sedativenoun. sedative
Heroin is an opiate and coke is a stimulant. Huge difference. Opiates stem from poppy plants, while cocaine is from the coca plant. One goes down, one goes up. Try them at the same time and you're in for a treat
"Bars" are Xanax (alprozalam). "Rolls" are Ecstasy (methylenedioxymethamphetamine). The two substances could hardly be more different in their effects. Xanax is a powerful, short acting depressant, causing relaxation, euphoria, reduced anxiety, reduced inhibitions, and forgetfulness. Ecstasy is a stimulant and an empathogen, meaning it causes powerful feelings of love, compassion, and empathy, as well as "rushing" and general stimulation. It is agreed by most Ecstasy users that the experience of listening to music is greatly enhanced by the drug.
No, broccoli can not. We are advanced enough in medical technology to be able to tell the difference between different types of a drug, even the chemical make-up of it, let alone vegetables and a stimulant.
difference between as on and as at
Hallucinogenic drugs mimic schizophrenia, and it believed that prolonged use of some of them may cause continuing symptoms.