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A series of interviews conducted in the late 1970s revealed a wide spectrum of users.
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In the late 1970s Time magazine and The Wall Street Journal reported that popper use among gay men began as a way to enhance sexual pleasure, but "quickly spread to avant-garde heterosexuals". butyl nitrite which is packaged under a variety of trade names in small bottles. The term extended to the drug in any form as well as to other drugs with similar effects, e.g. It was packaged and sold pharmaceutically in fragile glass ampoules wrapped in cloth sleeves which, when crushed or "popped" in the fingers, released the amyl nitrite for inhalation, hence the colloquialism poppers. The poppers "craze" began in the early 1970s in the Gay male community in gay bars, discothèques and bathhouses, marking its prominent presence in gay culture. 20th-century use Īlthough amyl nitrite is known for its practical therapeutic applications, the first documented case of recreational use was in 1964. Brunton also found that propyl nitrites had the same effects as well. Butyl nitrites were also documented around the late 1890s by Brunton and despite being found to have generally the same effects as amyl nitrites, they were never used as a clinical alternative to amyl nitrates. Brunton found that amyl nitrites had effects of dilating blood vessels and flushing of the face. It was then administered by direct inhalation of the vapours or inhalation through silk that covered the capsule. This administration process seems to be the origin of the slang term "poppers". The usual administration of these pearls was done by crushing them between the fingers, followed by a popping sound. Īmyl nitrites were originally enclosed in a glass mesh called "pearls". Brunton reasoned that the angina sufferer's pain and discomfort could be reduced by administering amyl nitrite-to dilate the coronary arteries of patients, thus improving blood flow to the heart muscle. Brunton was inspired by earlier work with the same agent, performed by Arthur Gamgee and Benjamin Ward Richardson. Sir Thomas Lauder Brunton, a Scottish physician born in the year of amyl nitrite's first synthesis, documented its clinical use to treat angina pectoris in 1867 when patients experiencing chest pains would experience complete relief after inhalation. The French chemist Antoine Jérôme Balard synthesized amyl nitrite in 1844. This section needs expansion with: a sourced paragraph on the transition from its use in medicine to its use as a recreational drug.