Teens Looking to Music to Get High
Teens Looking to Music to Get High
Websites selling sonic drugs claim that by listening to specific frequencies you can get the same effect as if you actually took recreational, prescription, and hallucinogenic drugs. Colleen Williams reports.
Automatically Generated Transcript (may not be 100% accurate)
" Sonics drugs or digital drugs also known as I don't sing are available online. What sites now claimed listing to specific sounds can't make you feel. Like you've taken real drugs. The marketing looks illegal but it's not you can -- individual drug doses or buy them bundled. Like the wasted pact which promises all the effects of opium cocaine and marijuana. There -- more than a thousand YouTube videos of people experimenting but I don't sing. Many featured teenagers twitching. Appearing spaced out and confused this teen who were called -- Admits to doing a lot of digital rights is currently in rehab Tarzan a treatment center where his addiction to -- drives is it like really getting mine yet. I'm saying it's not exactly the same -- it's. News and access sonic drugs may make teens more inclined to do the real thing you do that you -- you of the real fans like so you pardon him again. And that's what concerns addiction specialist doctor Gregory Smith."
" Someone you listen to. And I goes four for crack cocaine and in the next day you're smoking crack pipe. I don't think it's that dramatic but I do think if you haven't impressionable thirteen fourteen year old kid that does one of these high doses that it may make it. They dropped in addition a little bit if they're presented with the real drug to try it."
" This really is a new things so no -- fact that there seem to be no studies that indicate what effect if any it will have on your brain. So we went to a brain imaging specialist action measured it might brain waves -- listening to something that simulated. Being intoxicated. -- it sounds like. It's not music with two different frequencies played into each year at the same time starting to feel like a right handed kind of euphoria. The website says the experience should be like shotgun five glasses of Jim my hands that can be. Why I never actually -- but it did affect me I'd."
" Felt at one point that if -- stood out."
" I'd be a little wobbly we could actually see that the -- what's happening in fact on your brain that that. Times -- rain was calmer than at other times it was firing more radical. Doctor -- stresses every -- respond differently you'd think -- which is more associated with seizure activity now goes way. And that can be trouble."
" And Wallace seems to save his putting on a set of headphones. Can be especially dangerous for kids their -- and fully developed."
" And as we've shown today that this actually can change brain function. But we don't know what's gonna do it in a good way or bad way."
Related Content
A 19-year-old with autism has started his own business in eastern Iowa.
Video|Mon, 12 Mar 2012
|social securityfound at1:10
The first study of peewee tackle football shows these young children sometimes experience hits similar in force to those seen among college players.
Video|Mon, 12 Mar 2012
Non-Head Injuries Could Still Impact Thinking
Injuries to body parts other than the head may also impact athletes' thinking skills.
Video|Mon, 12 Mar 2012
|thinking skillsfound at0:06
Teens Influenced By Alcohol in Movies
Teens may be influenced to start drinking alcohol by seeing it in movies.
Video|Mon, 12 Mar 2012
|potential risk factorsfound at0:14
The latest caffeine craze to hit the market are small, lipstick-type tubes that contain an inhalable shot of the stimulant. A combination of caffeine and B vitamins, each inhaler packs the caffeine equivalent of a large cup of coffee.
Video|Mon, 12 Mar 2012
|heart ratefound at1:13
Dr. Nancy Reports on Male Anorexia
While women are more commonly associated with eating disorders, more than one-million men battle eating disorders every day. Nancy Snyderman reports.
Video|Wed, 29 Feb 2012
|anorexia nervosafound at0:21
Teen pregnancy rates are the lowest in 40 years.
Video|Wed, 29 Feb 2012
|teen birthsfound at0:17
Most teens can sleep the day away if you let them. But a new study says more sleep can actually hurt your teen's grades. Nkoyo Iyamba reports.
Video|Wed, 29 Feb 2012
|high schoolfound at0:20







