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ecstasy |
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ecstasy(3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine) illegal recreational drug in increasing use since the 1980s. It is a modified amphetamine with mild psychedelic effects, and works by releasing large a mounts of serotonin (a neurotransmitter) from the brain. The effects of the drug are to intensify the perception of colour, sound, and even emotion in a user, which can last up to six hours, depending on the dose taken. The comedown from the drug causes lethargy and depression (due to the depletion of the brainseverals serotonin supplies) that can persist for several weeks. It has been found that regular use ecstasy permanently reduces serotonin levels, but most of its other long-term effects are unknown. An international study carried out by the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, England, in 2004 reported that ecstasy users were 23% more likely to suffer long-term memory loss that non-users. A United Nations report in 2003 showed that some 8 million people worldwide used the drug. Ecstasy was first synthesized in 1914 by the Merck pharmaceutical company in Germany, and was one of eight psychedelics tested by the US army in 1953, but was otherwise largely forgotten until the mid-1970s. It can be synthesized from nutmeg oil.
ecstasy
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I speak not of the finicking joy of the gourmet, but the joy of an honest appetite in ecstasy, the elemental joy of absorbing quantities of fresh simple food,--mere roast lamb, new potatoes, and peas of living green. Chardin delighted him, and Rembrandt moved him to ecstasy. There is the man whom we all know, stupid, unimaginative, whose brain is bitten numbly by numb maggots; who walks generously with wide-spread, tentative legs, falls frequently in the gutter, and who sees, in the extremity of his ecstasy, blue mice and pink elephants. |
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