Chloroethane

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Chloroethane (also known as ethyl chloride, or spray poppers, and under various trade names such as Maximum Impact® and Black Max®) is a volatile organic solvent which produces rapid-onset intoxication when its vapors are inhaled. It is toxic and lethal in high concentrations.

Chloroethane
Other names Ethyl chloride, spray poppers
Health risk High
Addiction risk Moderate
Legal risk
External links

Background

Medical uses

Chloroethane was previously used as an inhalational anesthetic to produce general anesthesia. However, its flammability, toxicity, and pharmacokinetics have led to it being replaced by more modern agents such as sevoflurane. It is still sometimes used as a local anesthetic due to the chilling effect produced by topical evaporation.

Mechanism of action

Chloroethane is thought to produce intoxication primarily through GABA receptor agonism, similar to other volatile anesthetics.

Appeal

Dosing

Risks

Chloroethane is a central nervous system depressant, and its effects are dependent on dosing. In low doses, it causes effects similar to alcohol intoxication. In higher doses, it causes shallow breathing and loss of consciousness, eventually progressing to cessation of breathing and death. It may cause vomiting, and in combination of unconsciousness may cause aspiration of vomit.

Interactions

Addiction

Risk mitigation

Known incidents

Medical case reports

  • Death attributed to ethyl chloride (1993)[1]
  • Death due to inhalation of ethyl chloride (2000)[2]
  • A Fatal Case of Ethyl Chloride Sniffing Using Head-Cleaning Spray (2004)[3]
  • Is old stuff back? A fatal case of ethyl chloride sniffing (2019)[4]

References

  1. Yacoub, I.; Robinson, C. A.; Simmons, G. T.; Hall, M. (1993-10). "Death attributed to ethyl chloride". Journal of Analytical Toxicology. 17 (6): 384–385. doi:10.1093/jat/17.6.384. ISSN 0146-4760. PMID 8271788. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. Broussard, L. A.; Broussard, A. K.; Pittman, T. S.; Lirette, D. K. (2000-01). "Death due to inhalation of ethyl chloride". Journal of Forensic Sciences. 45 (1): 223–225. ISSN 0022-1198. PMID 10641945. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. Masakazu, O. Y. A.; Yoichi, Mitsukuni (2004). "A Fatal Case of Ethyl Chloride Sniffing Using Head-Cleaning Spray". 山梨医科学雑誌. 19 (4): 117–121. doi:10.34429/00002896.
  4. Pascali, Jennifer P.; Fais, Paolo; Viel, Guido; Cecchetto, Giovanni; Montisci, Massimo (2019-06-11). "Is old stuff back? A fatal case of ethyl chloride sniffing". Egyptian Journal of Forensic Sciences. 9 (1): 29. doi:10.1186/s41935-019-0136-4. ISSN 2090-5939.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link)