| Opium
There
were no legal restrictions on the importation or use
of opium until the early 1900s. In the United States,
the unrestricted availability of opium, the influx of
opium-smoking immigrants from East Asia, and the invention
of the hypodermic needle contributed to the more severe
variety of compulsive drug abuse seen at the turn of
the 20th century. In those days, medicines often contained
opium without any warning label. Today, there are state,
federal, and international laws governing the production
and distribution of narcotic substances.
Although
opium is used in the form of paragoric to treat diarrhea,
most opium imported into the United States is broken
down into its alkaloid constituents. These alkaloids
are divided into two distinct chemical classes, phenanthrenes
and isoquinolines. The principal phenanthrenes are morphine,
codeine, and thebaine, while the isoquinolines have
no significant central nervous system effects and are
not regulated under the CSA. |
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