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History
of Amphetamines
Amphetamine
was first synthesized in Germany in 1887. No medicinal use
was found for it until the late 1920s, when it was discovered
that amphetamine dilates the bronchial sacs of the lungs.
During the 20s and 30s, amphetamine was used to treat asthma,
hay fever, and the common cold. In 1932, the Benzedrine Inhaler
was introduced to the market, and was a huge over-the-counter
success.
Amphetamine
was soon available in pill form too. "Pep pills" were sold
over the counter for depression, Parkinson's disease, epilepsy,
motion sickness, night-blindness, hyperactive disorders of
children, obesity, narcolepsy, impotence, and apathy.
During
World War II, over 72 million amphetamine tablets were given
to soldiers on both sides of the conflict to keep them alert
and awake. The amphetamines also caused psychosis-like aggression
in some soldiers. Hitler was also known to have taken amphetamines
daily, by injection, which probably increased his psychotic
aggressiveness, as well.
After
the war, medical and non-medical use of amphetamines skyrocketed.
Tablets were readily available and very cheap. People looking
for extended wakefulness, like truck drivers and college students,
and people looking for bursts of energy, like athletes, began
abusing amphetamines. In addition, many cocaine users switched
to the legal amphetamines from illegal cocaine because the
effects of the two drugs are very similar.
In
1965, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration passed a group
of amendments that cracked down on the overuse of amphetamines,
among other drugs. While amphetamines continued to be over-prescribed
into the 70s, newer drugs with fewer side effects replaced
them for most medical uses.
Today,
amphetamines are used almost exclusively to treat the sleeping
disorder narcolepsy and Attention Deficit-Hyperactivity Disorder.
Many people with ADHD have a paradoxical response to amphetamines;
rather than making them more jumpy and hyperactive, as amphetamines
do to most people, amphetamines induce calm in ADHD patients.
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