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Recreational drugs statistics

An algorithm is built from first principles, where the system structure is recreated and subsequently the drug flow is simulated via Monte Carlo techniques [216]. This technique, based on principles of statistical physics, generates a microscopic picture of the intestinal tube. The desired features of the complexity are built in, in a random fashion. During the calculation all such features are kept frozen in the computer memory (in the form of arrays), and are utilized accordingly. The principal characteristic of the method is that if a very large number of such units is built, then the average behavior of all these will approach the true system behavior. [Pg.136]

U.S. every year die from alcohol-related diseases and accidents. THIS INCLUDES OVER 1,000 YEARLY ALCOHOL OVERDOSES. If marijuana had been our primary drug of choice recreationally in the past ten years alone, statistics suggest that several million people would not have suffered the horrible deaths they did. [Pg.11]

A study in 9 healthy subjects found that alcohol 0.8 g/kg increased the maximum plasma levels of a single 100-mg dose of ecstasy by 13%, with no change in AUC. The AUC and maximum plasma levels of alcohol were reduced by 9% and 15%, respectively, after ecstasy use. Another singledose study in 18 recreational users of ecstasy found a similar decrease in mean blood-alcohol levels and a small increase in ecstasy levels when the two drugs were given together, but the results were not statistically significant. ... [Pg.62]


See other pages where Recreational drugs statistics is mentioned: [Pg.100]    [Pg.96]    [Pg.404]    [Pg.160]    [Pg.609]    [Pg.138]    [Pg.1456]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.4 ]




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Recreational drugs

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