What is heroin?
What is heroin?
Herion usually comes as a fine powder ranging from an off-white to brown colour. Street names for heroin include H, brown, gear and smack.
How is heroin used?
Snorting
The drug dissolves slowly through the lining of the nostrils and enters the bloodstream.
Smoking
The powder is usually heated on foil and the fumes inhaled. It gets into your body via the lungs and affects you almost immediately.
Injecting
Heroin that's injected has been dissolved in citric or ascorbic acid. Injecting is a quick way to get a lot of it into your bloodstream and up to your brain, producing what you might call a ‘rush’. It’s also the most dangerous way to take it.
What are the effects of heroin?
Heroin is a downer and makes you feel calm, relaxed, safe, and warm. It can also constipate you and make you feel sick – particularly the first few times you use it.
What are the problems with heroin?
Physical dependence
You can become physically dependent after regular, repeated use. That means you’ll experience withdrawal symptoms when you stop using.
Overdose
Heroin slows down your breathing and heart rate. It can be fatal to use more heroin than you’re used to or from a more potent batch than usual.
If you haven't used heroin for a while and your tolerance levels have dropped, using the same amount as you were used to can be particularly risky.
Mixing heroin with other downer drugs, such as methadone, alcohol, and benzodiazepines, like diazepam (Valium) and temazepam, is dangerous and increases the risk of overdose.
Signs of an overdose including the following:
- confusion
- unconsciousness (unable to wake someone up when you shout or shake them)
- severe nausea and vomiting
- having a fit
- difficulty breathing
- snoring or raspy breathing
- blue/pale tingeing of knees, hands, and lips
- slow or erratic pulse (heartbeat)
- pale, cold, and clammy skin
If you think somebody is overdosing, put them in the recovery position (on their side) and call an ambulance as soon as you can. A 999 operator can also talk you through giving naloxone.
Information available in over 100 languages
Drug Talk provides accessible drug and alcohol information for people from ethnic backgrounds living in Wirral.
Click the button at the bottom of the screen to read or listen in your preferred language.