Hong Kong Girl Snorts Herself to Death

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Aug 10, 2009
Recently you have probably heard and read many stories about the increase in use of Ketamine by our youth. This development has prompted the government to start a series of random drug tests at our schools, despite growing opposition and concerns about privacy laws being breached. Your opinion on the matter is of course entirely up to you. To address the seriousness of the situation however, you can find a video below of a Hong Kong girl who decided to enter a Ketamine snorting contest, supposedly across the border in China. If you’re thinking ‘holy mini cooper, this isn’t gonna end well’, you’re a smart cookie. The girl is reported to have passed out and died at the hospital that same evening.


Source
Video from worldstarhiphop


That's a long line to snort.
 
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Ok so she did die because the last thing I heard she was just hospitalized. Craziness. Not that much money in the world and her friend are just as foul.
 
Saw the video was on worldstar and the line was about 5 feet long. She's really stupid for doing this.
 
Ketamine snorting contest?
Really?
Ket is a dissociative...its not freakin beer..who the hell would have a contest on snorting it?
Its something that you should take so you're in a comfortable level..
I swear, kids these days, ingesting drugs without even knowing background knowledge..
 
[h3]Psychological effects[/h3]
Ketamine produces effects similar to PCP and DXM. Unlike the other well known dissociatives PCP and DXM, ketamine is very short acting, its hallucinatory effects lasting sixty minutes when insufflated or injected and up to two hours when ingested, the total experience lasting no more than a couple of hours.[sup][71][/sup] Like other dissociative anaesthetics, hallucinations caused by ketamine are fundamentally different from those caused by tryptamines and phenethylamines. At low doses, hallucinations are only seen when one is in a dark room with one's eyes closed, while at medium to high doses the effects are far more intense and obvious.[sup][72][/sup]

Ketamine produces a dissociative state, characterised by a sense of detachment from one's physical body and the external world which is known as depersonalization and derealization.[sup][73][/sup] At sufficiently high doses (e.g. 150 mg intramuscular), users may experience what is coined the "K-hole", a state of dissociation whose effects are thought to mimic the phenomenology of schizophrenia.[sup][74][/sup] Users may experience worlds or dimensions that are ineffable, all the while being completely unaware of their individual identities or the external world. Users have reported intense hallucinations including visual hallucinations, perceptions of falling, fast and gradual movement and flying, 'seeing God', feeling connected to other users, objects and the cosmos, experiencing psychotic reactions, and shared hallucinations and thoughts with adjacent users. John C. Lilly,[sup][75][/sup]Marcia Moore[sup][76][/sup] and . M. Turner[sup][77][/sup] (among others) have written extensively about their own spiritual/psychonautic use of ketamine. (Both Moore[sup][78][/sup] and Turner[sup][79][/sup] died prematurely in a way that has been linked to their ketamine use.)

Users may feel as though their perceptions are located so deep inside the mind that the real world seems distant (hence the use of a "hole" to describe the experience). Some users may not remember this part of the experience after regaining consciousness, in the same way that a person may forget a dream. Owing to the role of the NMDA receptor in long-term potentiation, this may be due to disturbances in memory formation. The "re-integration" process is slow, and the user gradually becomes aware of surroundings. At first, users may not remember their own names, or even know that they are human, or what that means. Movement is extremely difficult, and a user may not be aware that he or she has a body at all.
 
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