Mouth numbing: Difference between revisions

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'''Sublingual numbing''' is a physical side effect of administering certain drugs sublingually (under the tongue). This effect can be described as an obvious feeling of general numbness of the tongue and mouth which can stay for up to an hour after the drug has been administered.  
'''Mouth numbing''' is a physical side effect of administering certain drugs [[sublingual]]ly (under the tongue) or [[buccal]]ly. This effect can be described as an obvious feeling of general numbness of the tongue and mouth which can stay for up to an hour after the drug has been administered.  


The [[NBOMe]] series ([[25C-NBOMe]], [[25B-NBOMe]], and [[25I-NBOMe]]) cause this effect consistently and it is accompanied by a strong, unpleasant, metallic chemical taste immediately after sublingual absorption. As [[LSD]] does not cause numbing or a strong chemical taste, this is the key difference when it comes to determining whether your blotter paper contains LSD or one of the NBOMe series.  
The [[NBOMe]] series ([[25C-NBOMe]], [[25B-NBOMe]], and [[25I-NBOMe]]) cause this effect consistently and it is accompanied by a strong, unpleasant, metallic chemical taste immediately after sublingual absorption. As [[LSD]] does not cause numbing or a strong chemical taste, this is the key difference when it comes to determining whether your blotter paper contains LSD or one of the NBOMe series.