Amphetamine in a sentence as a noun

In 1979, Graham bet Erdös $500 that he couldn't stop taking amphetamines for a month.

' After he won the bet, he promptly resumed his amphetamine use."

" After he won the bet, he promptly resumed his amphetamine use.

> Perhaps I shouldn't blame two amphetamine pills for something that was so much bigger;No, you shouldn't.

It's that the dosage administered was far more than what would be comparable for methamphetamine.

I say this because the host indicated that kids are primarily on methamphetamine.

The IRS is currently on an amphetamine-fueled jihad against offshore bank accounts.

Not just about amphetamines, but also about the structures of our society that make amphetamine so sought after.

You seem to understand what's going on, but for anybody else who's curious:Adderall isn't methamphetamine.

A world where methamphetamine is legal but regulated is better than a world where it is decriminalized and unregulated.

Another study found that rats isolated in key parts of their development are more prone to alcohol and amphetamine addiction in adulthood [4].

You know that the methamphetamine your doctor prescribe will actually be methamphetamine and that it will not be contaminated with oxidizing agents.

It's very well proven that amphetamine/methamphetamine increases the level of free dopamine in the cytosol which are prone to auto-oxidation to quinones.

The reason Vyvanse has reportedly lower side-effects is because it lacks the less effective l-enantiomer, not because the amphetamine is otherwise radically different.

Vyvanse contains a single enantiomer of a single amphetamine; Adderall contains two enantiomers each of two amphetamines, but if you know that, you probably already know everything else I'm clarifying here anyway.

> Adderall/Desoxyn/Methamphetamine/"Speed" are a great exampleSmall clarification: Adderall isn't methamphetamine, it's amphetamine.

Amphetamine definitions

noun

a central nervous system stimulant that increases energy and decreases appetite; used to treat narcolepsy and some forms of depression

See also: upper speed