Ketamine and bladder damage
A large article on the growing health effects of ketamine abuse in Malaysia, including infographic.
By the time David*, 35, showed up at his urologist's office in need of bladder enlargement surgery, it had been two years since he first experienced problems urinating. Coincidentally, it was also three years since he started taking ketamine regularly at nightclubs after work.
The memories from last year are still fresh in his wife's mind. "At the time, his condition was really bad. He was constantly in pain, he could not eat, and he was not able to urinate, although he felt like going to the toilet all the time," Sally* explains. "He could barely function, let alone go to work."
David's symptoms were a result of a damaged and shrunken bladder -- a condition doctors are increasingly starting to notice in people who use ketamine regularly since reports first surfaced in Canada and Hong Kong in 2007.
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It`s not "organic v.s. chemical" that matters by the way, everything is "CHEMICAL" the difference is "synthetic v.s. organic" chemistry, You have to look at the compound itself what it is chemicaly related to how it affects the brain to assess what "damage" it does, Speed is also natural(yes it has been found naturaly in the bark of a tree in texas, Acacia I belive!?!?!but someone feel free to look up the name I am far too tired), Speed is super neuroprotective and also healthy!
1 DAMAGES BLADDER.
FUCKING LAZY FUCKS
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