Crystalline Substances, Opiates, and Psychotropic Drugs – Transgenerational Effects on Physiology, Cognition, and Society

A Critical Review of Drug Abuse and Its Long-Term Consequences


1. Introduction

The worldwide abuse of hard substances – particularly crystalline drugs such as methamphetamine, but also opiates such as heroin and opium, as well as certain modern psychotropic drugs – not only has acute effects on the user themselves, but is increasingly exhibiting heritable, structural, and cognitive effects across multiple generations. These effects manifest themselves not only at the psychological level, but also in visible physiological characteristics such as changes in skull and facial shape, skin texture, and behavioral and cognitive patterns.


2. Crystalline Substances: Methamphetamine and Derivatives

2.1 Immediate Neurotoxic Effects

Methamphetamine (Crystal Meth) leads to massive dopamine and noradrenaline release, which has a euphoric effect in the short term but a neurodegenerative effect in the long term. Studies show that chronic use:

2.2 Transgenerational Effects

Numerous animal studies (e.g., in mice) show epigenetic modifications in the germ cells of meth users:

2.3 Morphological abnormalities

Observed phenomena in children and grandchildren of chronic users:


3. Opiates (Heroin, Opium): Historical and Modern Consequences

3.1 Social Background

Opium was used for centuries in both Asia and Europe. The transition to heroin in the 20th century dramatically exacerbated the consequences. Chronic use shows:

3.2 Epigenetic Effects

Studies on opiate users show Offspring:


4. Modern psychotropic drugs (SSRIs, antipsychotics, stimulants)

4.1 Short-term effects

In acute psychiatric conditions, medications are life-saving. However, long-term administration, especially in children and adolescents, is increasingly viewed critically.

4.2 Observed Effects


5. Social Comparisons: Healthy Control Groups

5.1 Low Drug Prevalence: Poland, Slovakia, Japan, Korea

In regions with traditionally low access to methamphetamine and opiates, children are more likely to exhibit:

5.2 Historically Burdened Societies: China, Great Britain, Germany (partially)


6. Loss of Reality and Inversion of Logic

Chronic exposure to crystalline and psychoactive substances often leads to:


7. Conclusion: Warning against Abuse

The careless use of crystalline substances – be it as a street drug or in psychiatry - not only leads to individual harm, but also gradually changes:

A responsible approach to psychotropic drugs and a clear ban on crystalline drugs must therefore be uncompromisingly enforced medically, politically, and socially.

 


4.2 Modern psychotropic drugs in adults: abuse, side effects, Late Effects

Although modern psychotropic drugs – such as SSRIs, neuroleptics, atypical antipsychotics, lithium, benzodiazepines, and stimulants – are used in clinical settings for "stabilization" or "crisis intervention." Long-term observations increasingly show that chronic use (over months to years) in adults is associated with significant physical, cognitive, and structural deformities.

4.2.1 Morphological Changes Due to Chronic Use

4.2.2 Cognitive impoverishment and incapacitation

4.2.3 Reversibility and period without RReturn


4.3 Social Impact

The gradual but massive increase in psychiatric Long-term medication in adults – even outside of acute phases of illness – has profound consequences:


Clear positioning

There is no good word for the chronic administration of modern psychotropic drugs in healthy or stabilizeable adults.
Their use outside of acute States of emergency is a systemic malpractice that leads to physical, cognitive, and social degeneration in the long term.

 


Literature and References (selection)


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