One of the firsts see in junkies is that they lack on money most of the time. After repeated use of heroin, more long-term effects may begin to appear. Chronic users may develop collapsed veins, infection of the heart lining and valves, abscesses, liver disease, and lung-related complications such as pneumonia. In addition to the effects of the drug itself, some heroin may contain additives that do not easily dilute in the bloodstream, resulting in clogging of the blood vessels in the lungs, liver, kidneys, or brain. Overdose, severe addiction, and/or death may also occur following initial use.
No.
Death
Acctually heroine don't kill people If you r not injecting it . but if you are a heroine adictive and you wont get heroine then u will die of feavour or nemoinia . This drug is very adictive , so dont cross the line and only smoke weeds .
Properly, it is called intravenous injection, but the slang terms shooting up and mainlining also mean the same thing.
Why even think of such a thing it would probably kill it.
Well me being a licensed doctor i have had many heroine patients and the effects of heroine are much worse than a simple bottle of coca cola. That is pathetic and those two should never be compared.
High blood pressure, unimaginable pain, loud ringing noises etc.
you die. that is not the correct answer who ever put that im a person you overdosed on heroin and cocaine injecting and i made it
Heroin effects you faster when injecting because as soon as the heroin hits your bloodstream, it rushes throughout your entire body and vessels. This is often called a heroin "rush" and is usually why people repeatedly inject the drug.
You say "lily is a super heroine"
The opposite of heroine is hero.
Meth can enter the body through various methods, such as smoking, injecting, snorting, or swallowing. Each method has a different speed of onset and intensity of effects. Smoking and injecting meth deliver the drug rapidly to the brain, resulting in intense effects, while swallowing or snorting meth produces a slower onset of effects.