๐งต Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Tue, 18 Jun 2024 21:34:41 UTC No. 16241642
In a lot of mangas and manhwas the spies will be black mailed with poison and have to go back to their handlers every week or the poison will start spreading through out their body
Im no scientist but could such a mechanism exist where you make a person take a pill and keep them on a leash by promising them the antidote on a weekly /monthly basis
Anonymous at Tue, 18 Jun 2024 21:37:52 UTC No. 16241645
>>16241642
Yes. It exists. That's what HRT is. Also, heart medication. This is just how the pharmaceutical industry makes money.
Anonymous at Tue, 18 Jun 2024 21:39:55 UTC No. 16241650
>>16241642
Yes it's possible. If you were smart about it you wouldn't call it poison though you'd call it a vaccine, and you wouldn't call it an antidote you'd call it a booster.
It'd be like taking any medication that prevents the spread or proliferation of an illness with regular injections, either to balance out the number or quantity or to inhibit the symptoms you'd develop from it. ARV drugs are an example of this, many pooftahs rely on these to stop the virus from replicating any more once it's inside them. If they stop taking them it replicates and does more damage.
Anonymous at Tue, 18 Jun 2024 21:41:46 UTC No. 16241655
Dr Stone at Tue, 18 Jun 2024 21:53:13 UTC No. 16241668
>>16241642
Nobody sane would ever spy for such a handler.
No matter what.
In fact a sane person would quite probably work against their handler in that case as a strategic deterrent.
Anonymous at Tue, 18 Jun 2024 22:38:48 UTC No. 16241734
>>16241642
On a game theoretic level I don't get it. Why would this not be exploited by handlers to exploit their spies as work slaves?
Anonymous at Tue, 18 Jun 2024 23:51:32 UTC No. 16241840
What medicines have dangerous interactions if you take them together?
Seizure Medications
Anti-seizure drugs like phenytoin, carbamazepine, and valproic acid have a narrow therapeutic range, increasing the risk of interactions. They can dangerously interact with:
Antibiotics
Antidepressants
Antifungals
Oral contraceptives
Heart Medications
Drugs for heart conditions may interact with each other or other medications:
Digoxin and quinidine can cause hyperkalemia (high potassium levels)
Clonidine and propranolol can lead to rebound hypertension if clonidine is stopped abruptly
Opioid Painkillers
Combining opioids like oxycodone or fentanyl with alcohol increases the risk of respiratory depression and overdose
Psychiatric Medications
Antidepressants like fluoxetine (Prozac) should not be taken with monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) like phenelzine due to the risk of serotonin syndrome, which can be fatal
It's crucial for patients to inform their doctors about all medications they are taking, including over-the-counter drugs and supplements, to avoid dangerous drug interactions
10 Drug Interactions Every Pharmacist Should Know
https://www.pharmacytimes.com/view/
BINARY POISON. You get doped with the harmless drug first, they kill you with the drug that interacts fatally with the harmless drug.
Mixing Benzodiazepines and Alcohol: Risks, Effects, and Dangers
https://americanaddictioncenters.or
Babylon 5: Londo Molari and Reefa
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=b_sBN
[Londo Mollari asks Lord Refa to sever his relationship with the Shadows]
Lord Refa: Oh Londo, you are a fool. You walked away from the greatest power I have ever seen. Now you expect me to do the same? They are the key to my eventual rise to the throne! Why would I abandon them?
Londo Mollari: Because I have asked you. Because your loyalty to our people should be greater than your ambition. And because I have poisoned your drink.
Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 00:03:26 UTC No. 16241868
To harm months later, adverse drug interactions can have half-life factors AKA "BINARY POISONS".
What adverse drug interactions can occur months after taking the initial medication ?
Some adverse drug interactions can occur months or even years after taking the initial medication. Here are a few examples:
Delayed rhabdomyolysis from statins
An uncommon but serious potential adverse effect of statin medications (used to lower cholesterol) is rhabdomyolysis, which is a breakdown of muscle tissue. This can be triggered by drug interactions months after starting a statin, especially when combined with certain antibiotics, antifungals, or protease inhibitors.
Carcinogenic effects from alkylating agents
Alkylating agents like cyclophosphamide, used for chemotherapy, can substantially increase the risk of developing secondary cancers many years after treatment due to their DNA-damaging effects.
Cushing's syndrome from corticosteroids
Chronic use of corticosteroid medications over weeks or months can lead to iatrogenic Cushing's syndrome, which causes symptoms like weight gain, diabetes, osteoporosis, and immunosuppression. The effects may persist long after discontinuing the corticosteroid.
Anticoagulant effects from drug interactions
Certain medications like antibiotics (e.g. metronidazole) can enhance the anticoagulant effects of warfarin months after being started, increasing the risk of bleeding complications.
Hepatotoxicity from isoniazid
Isoniazid used for tuberculosis treatment can rarely cause delayed hepatotoxicity and liver injury months after initiation, especially when combined with other hepatotoxic drugs.
In general, drugs with long half-lives, those that cause cumulative toxicity, and medications that induce or inhibit liver enzymes have a higher risk of delayed adverse interactions when combined with other drugs metabolized by the same pathways. Close monitoring is required when starting new medications in such cases.
Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 00:04:19 UTC No. 16241871
Hypothetically you could have molecular technology like molecules containing other molecules. Like buckyballs, with the dangerous molecule held inside. Then suppose the container molecule naturally degrades in the body, releasing the poison, unless another molecule is present that binds to the container molecule and prevents degradation. That would be the antidote. But eventually the binding molecule also degrades, so you need another dose.
Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 00:27:45 UTC No. 16241912
>>16241642
Kill the handler after I get the cure, clearly he is too retarded to gain loyalty from agents.