The psychedelic properties of LSD were discovered accidentally by Albert Hofmann on April 16, 1943.
LSD has effects on all people and animals
No, if anything, LSD would effect the effects of cigarettes. when ever I did LSD, I seemed to chain smoke and i never could get enough nicotine.
The chemical in LSD responsible for the psychedelic effects is LSD itself, lysergic acid diethylamide.
LSD was first synthesized in Basel, Switzerland in 1938 by Dr. Albert Hofmann.
LSD is a hallucinogen with no effects on the respritory system and there is no risk for resperitory depression. Combining LSD with methadone or other opiates is a relatively safe combination with little if no adverse effects
Some people claim milk lessens the effects of LSD, but this unproven. Even if milk did reduce the effects of LSD slightly, it certainly wouldn't end them completely.
of course .
Hofmann was working for Sandoz laboratories developing ergot derivatives for use in medicine. He was accidentally exposed to some LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide) years after it was first synthesized and experienced interesting effects. To test if LSD had caused these effects, Hofmann ingested a significant dose (which he believed to be merely the threshold dose). Needless to say, Hofmann experienced profound psychedelic effects, and thus discovered the psychopharmacological properties of the compound.
Nope. There is no evidence of LSD causing long term physical effects at normal recreational doses.
If you mix the effects of marijuana and LSD, your LSD trip will change in character.
While tolerance to the effects of LSD can develop, it is unlikely to cause dependence.
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